Since the discovery that actin and actin-related proteins (ARPs) reside in the nucleus as integral subunits of chromatin-modifying and chromatin-remodeling complexes, efforts to uncover their roles in chromatin regulation have met with limited success. In a new study, the previously mysterious helicase-SANT–associated (HSA) domain found in many chromatin regulatory complexes is shown to act as a module that directs recruitment and contributes to the action of actin and ARPs in chromatin regulation.
- Aaron J Gottschalk
- Ronald C Conaway
- Joan Weliky Conaway