Section I: Histone Mark Writers 1. Histone Acetyltransferases, Key Writers of the Epigenetic Language 2. Impacts of Histone Lysine Methylation on Chromatin 3. The Role of Histone Mark Writers in Chromatin Signaling: Protein Arginine Methyltransferases 4. Histone Kinases and Phosphatases
Section II: Histone Mark Readers 5. The Bromodomain as an Acetyl-Lysine Reader Domain 6. Chromo Domain Proteins 7. The Role of PHD Fingers in Chromatin Signaling: Mechanisms and Functional Consequences of the Recognition of Histone and Non-histone Targets 8. Tudor Domains as Methyl-Lysine and Methyl-Arginine Readers
Section III: Histone Mark Erasers 9. Histone Deacetylases, the Erasers of the Code 10. Lysine Demethylases: Structure, Function, and Disfunction
Section IV: Chromatin Signaling 11. Variation, Modification, and Reorganization of Broken Chromatin 12. Crosstalk Between Histone Modifications Integrates Various Signaling Inputs to Fine-Tune Transcriptional Output 13. Signaling and Chromatin Networks in Cancer Biology
Section V: Chromatin Dynamics in Normal and Disease Conditions 14. Crosstalk Between DNA Methylation and Chromatin Structure 15. Epigenetic Regulation of Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress 16. Chromatin Signaling in Aging and Cellular Senescence 17. Chromatin Dynamics and Epigenetics of Stem Cells and Stem-Like Cancer Cells 18. Altered Chromatin Signaling in Cancer 19. Impact of Chromatin Changes in Pathogenesis of Infectious Diseases: A Pathogen View 20. Chromatin Remodeling and Epigenetic Reprogramming in Chronic Disease and Cancer in the Liver and Pancreas 21. Pharmacological and Therapeutic Targeting of Epigenetic Regulators 22. Use of Chromatin Changes as Biomarkers 23. Regulation of Host Chromatin by Bacterial Metabolites 25. Phase separation and chromatin 26. Cancer evolution