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Miharu Hisaoka

Researcher at University of Tsukuba

Publications -  9
Citations -  366

Miharu Hisaoka is an academic researcher from University of Tsukuba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chromatin remodeling & Chromatin. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 327 citations. Previous affiliations of Miharu Hisaoka include Yokohama City University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Transcription regulation of the rRNA gene by a multifunctional nucleolar protein, B23/nucleophosmin, through its histone chaperone activity.

TL;DR: The results suggest that B23 is involved in the transcription regulation of the rRNA gene as a nucleolar histone chaperone.
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Function of homo- and hetero-oligomers of human nucleoplasmin/nucleophosmin family proteins NPM1, NPM2 and NPM3 during sperm chromatin remodeling

TL;DR: A novel mechanism whereby three NPM proteins cooperatively regulate chromatin disassembly and assembly in the early embryo and in somatic cells is proposed.
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Intrinsically disordered regions of nucleophosmin/B23 regulate its RNA binding activity through their inter- and intra-molecular association

TL;DR: A novel mechanism by which B23 recognizes specific RNA targets is reported by which the inter- and intra-molecular interactions between the two IDRs contribute to the regulation of the RNA binding activity of CTD to control the cellular localization and functions of B23.
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Regulation of nucleolar chromatin by B23/nucleophosmin jointly depends upon its RNA binding activity and transcription factor UBF.

TL;DR: It is found that depletion of upstream binding factor (UBF; an rRNA transcription factor) decreased the chromatin binding affinity of B23, which in turn led to an increase in histone density at the r-chromatin, which suggests a novel cell cycle-dependent mechanism for the site-specific regulation of hist one density.
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Tracking adenovirus genomes identifies morphologically distinct late DNA replication compartments.

TL;DR: This work demonstrates the formation of previously uncharacterized viral DNA replication compartments specific for late phases of infection that produce progeny viral genomes accumulating in ViPR bodies.