Producing competent gametes is essential for transmitting genetic information throughout generations. Spermatogenesis is a unique example of rearrangements of genome packaging to ensure fertilization. After meiosis, spermatids undergo drastic morphological changes, perhaps the most dramatic ones occurring in their nuclei, including the transition into a protamine-packaged genome. In this issue of Genes & Development, Montellier and colleagues (pp. 1680-1692) shed new light on the molecular mechanisms regulating this transition by ascribing for the first time a function to a histone variant, TH2B, in the regulation of this process. © 2013 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
CITATION STYLE
Bošković, A., & Torres-Padilla, M. E. (2013, August 1). How mammals pack their sperm: A variant matter. Genes and Development. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.226167.113
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