Researchers have discovered physical interactions between proteins and DNA that help explain why specialized droplets called condensates, which contain the machinery needed to copy DNA into RNA, tend to cluster at genomic regions that are particularly active in a given cell.
Study furthers radically new view of gene control
Researchers have discovered physical interactions between proteins and DNA that help explain why specialized droplets called condensates, which contain the machinery needed to copy DNA into RNA, tend to cluster at genomic regions that are particularly active in a given cell.