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Patrick Rodriguez

Researcher at Erasmus University Medical Center

Publications -  18
Citations -  2159

Patrick Rodriguez is an academic researcher from Erasmus University Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transcription factor & Repressor. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 18 publications receiving 2041 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick Rodriguez include École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne & Erasmus University Rotterdam.

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Efficient biotinylation and single-step purification of tagged transcription factors in mammalian cells and transgenic mice

TL;DR: BirA-mediated biotinylation of tagged proteins provides the basis for the single-step purification of proteins from mammalian cells, and works efficiently in transgenic mice, raising the prospect of using biOTinylation tagging in protein complex purification directly from animal tissues.
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GATA‐1 forms distinct activating and repressive complexes in erythroid cells

TL;DR: It is shown that FOG‐1 mediates GATA‐1 interactions with the MeCP1 complex, thus providing an explanation for the overlapping functions of these two factors in erythropoiesis.
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Proteomics Analysis of Ring1B/Rnf2 Interactors Identifies a Novel Complex with the Fbxl10/Jhdm1B Histone Demethylase and the Bcl6 Interacting Corepressor

TL;DR: This work identified a novel Ring1B-Fbxl10 complex that also includes Bcl6 corepressor (BcoR), CK2α, Skp1, and Nspc1/Pcgf1 and potentially provides additional mechanisms for chromatin modification/recruitment to chromatin and more evidence for Ring1b/Rnf2 activities beyond those typically associated with PcG function.
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Histone demethylase KDM5A is an integral part of the core Notch-RBP-J repressor complex

TL;DR: It is shown that the histone demethylase KDM5A is an integral, conserved component of Notch/RBP-J gene silencing, and interacts physically with RBP-J; this interaction is crucial for Notch-induced growth and tumorigenesis responses.
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ETO2 coordinates cellular proliferation and differentiation during erythropoiesis

TL;DR: The results suggest that the dynamics of ETO2 recruitment within nuclear complexes couple cell proliferation to cell differentiation and determine the onset of terminal erythroid maturation.