Namrita Dhillon, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
1985-1989 Biochemistry University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom 
 1994-1997 Mol Cell Biology University of California at Berkeley 
 2006- MCD Biology University of California (Santa Cruz) 
Google:
"Namrita Dhillon"
Mean distance: (not calculated yet)
 
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Wu K, Dhillon N, Bajor A, et al. (2023) Yeast Heterochromatin Only Stably Silences Weak Regulatory Elements by Altering Burst Duration. Biorxiv : the Preprint Server For Biology
Wu K, Dhillon N, Du K, et al. (2021) Measuring the buffering capacity of gene silencing in . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 118
Dhillon N, Shelansky R, Townshend B, et al. (2020) Permutational analysis of regulatory elements. Synthetic Biology (Oxford, England). 5: ysaa007
Hamdani O, Dhillon N, Hsieh TS, et al. (2019) Transfer RNA Genes Affect Chromosome Structure and Function via Local Effects. Molecular and Cellular Biology
Kirkland JG, Peterson MR, Still CD, et al. (2015) Heterochromatin formation via recruitment of DNA repair proteins. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 26: 1395-410
Dhillon N, Raab J, Guzzo J, et al. (2009) DNA polymerase epsilon, acetylases and remodellers cooperate to form a specialized chromatin structure at a tRNA insulator. The Embo Journal. 28: 2583-600
Valenzuela L, Dhillon N, Kamakaka RT. (2009) Transcription independent insulation at TFIIIC-dependent insulators Genetics. 183: 131-148
Valenzuela L, Dhillon N, Dubey RN, et al. (2008) Long-range communication between the silencers of HMR Molecular and Cellular Biology. 28: 1924-1935
Dhillon N, Oki M, Szyjka SJ, et al. (2006) H2A.Z functions to regulate progression through the cell cycle. Molecular and Cellular Biology. 26: 489-501
Dhillon N, Kamakaka RT. (2002) Breaking through to the other side: silencers and barriers. Current Opinion in Genetics & Development. 12: 188-92
See more...