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repression
(redirected from Gene repression)

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repression

In psychology, a mental process that ejects and excludes from consciousness ideas, impulses, or memories that would otherwise threaten emotional stability.

In the Austrian psychiatrist Sigmund Freud's early writing, repression is controlled by the censor, a hypothetical mechanism or agency that allows ideas, memories, and so on from the unconscious to emerge into consciousness only if distorted or disguised, as for example in dreams.



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5-Aza-denxycytidine partially restored the transcription of several suppressed genes, showing that epigenetic DNA methylatinn was probably involved in arsenical-induced gene repression.
Studies can include cloning of receptor-regulated genes, analysis of mechanisms of gene repression by nuclear receptors, evaluation of the role of receptor phosphorylation in receptor signaling, development of novel model systems to study coactivators/
 
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