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User:Nicholas Bantz/Sandbox 1

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
[[Image:Histone.png|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 1: DNA (red) wrapped around histone proteins with histone tails (blue)]]
[[Image:Histone.png|200 px|right|thumb|Figure 1: DNA (red) wrapped around histone proteins with histone tails (blue)]]
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LSD-1 is a lysine [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demethylase demethylase]. A histone is a blah blah blah and can be seen in Fig. 1.
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LSD-1, human lysine-specific [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demethylase demethylase] 1, is an enzyme that affects the ability of DNA to associate with histone proteins. Histone proteins are positively charged proteins that act as spools for negatively charged DNA to wrap around for storage as in the nucleus (Figure 1). When DNA is tightly condensed it forms into nucleosomes which consist of 8 histone core proteins (2 H2A, 2 H2B, 2 H3, 2 H4) with DNA tightly coiled around them. This tightly coiled DNA is known as heterochromatin, which is inaccessible to transcription factors and RNA polymerase. This can be reversed by modifications to histone protein structure that cause the DNA to relax and form euchromatin, which allows for RNA polymerase and other transcription factors to properly execute transcription. One key histone modification is the demethylation of lysine residues. Before 2004, it was believed that methylation of histone tails was stable and irreversible. In 2004, it was discovered that histone tails can also be demethylated by demethylase enzymes such as LSD-1 <ref name="Shi">doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2004.12.012</ref>. LSD-1 specifically demethylates mono- or di-methylated lysine substrates on the histone tail of H3 on Lys4 or Lys9. Demethylation of these lysine residues is commonly associated with transcriptional activation, but it also has the ability to silence genes depending on the residue being demethylated, the cofactors present, and the environment in which the demethylation occurs. LSD-1 is among the most well-known demethylases and has been studied since its instrumental discovery in 2004 <ref name="Shi"/>.
== Structure ==
== Structure ==
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== Medical Implications ==
== Medical Implications ==
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Knowledge about LSD-1 in the scientific community remains fairly rudimentary as it was discovered recently in 2004 <ref name="Shi">doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2004.12.012</ref>. However, the physiological implications that LSD-1 may have on medical conditions are being researched. LSD-1 has proposed roles in both diabetes and in cancer development.
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Knowledge about LSD-1 in the scientific community remains fairly rudimentary as it was discovered recently in 2004 <ref name="Shi"/>. However, the physiological implications that LSD-1 may have on medical conditions are being researched. LSD-1 has proposed roles in both diabetes and in cancer development.
===1. Diabetes===
===1. Diabetes===

Revision as of 00:37, 9 April 2019

LSD-1: Human lysine-specific demethylase 1

LSD1 2h94

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