نتایج جستجو برای: interphase microtubule damage response

تعداد نتایج: 1200566  

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 1993
T Umeyama S Okabe Y Kanai N Hirokawa

MAP2C is a microtubule-associated protein abundant in immature nerve cells. We isolated a cDNA clone encoding whole mouse MAP2C of 467 amino acid residues. In fibroblasts transiently transfected with cDNA of MAP2C, interphase microtubule networks were reorganized into microtubule bundles. To reveal the dynamic properties of microtubule bundles, we analyzed the incorporation sites of exogenously...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 1998
A Blocker G Griffiths J C Olivo A A Hyman F F Severin

We have shown previously that intracellular phagosome movement requires microtubules. Here we provide evidence that within cells phagosomes display two different kinds of microtubule-based movements in approximately equal proportions. The first type occurs predominantly in the cell periphery, often shortly after the phagosome is formed, and at speeds below 0.1 microm/second. The second is faste...

Journal: :Mutagenesis 2013
Zbigniew Korwek Anna Bielak-Zmijewska Grazyna Mosieniak Olga Alster Maria Moreno-Villanueva Alexander Burkle Ewa Sikora

Curcumin, a phytochemical derived from the rhizome of Curcuma longa, is a very potent inducer of cancer cell death. It is believed that cancer cells are more sensitive to curcumin treatment than normal cells. Curcumin has been shown to act as a prooxidant and induce DNA lesions in normal cells. We were interested in whether curcumin induces DNA damage and the DNA damage response (DDR) signallin...

2017
Oakley C. Olson Hyunjung Kim Daniela F. Quail Emily A. Foley Johanna A. Joyce

Antimitotic agents, including Taxol, disrupt microtubule dynamics and cause a protracted mitotic arrest and subsequent cell death. Despite the broad utility of these drugs in breast cancer and other tumor types, clinical response remains variable. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) suppress the duration of Taxol-induced mitotic arrest in breast cancer cells and promote earlier mitotic slippage...

2015
Brice Chanez Anthony Gonçalves Ali Badache Pascal Verdier-Pinard

Non-cytotoxic concentrations of microtubule targeting agents (MTAs) interfere with the dynamics of interphase microtubules and affect cell migration, which could impair tumor angiogenesis and metastasis. The underlying mechanisms however are still ill-defined. We previously established that directed cell migration is dependent on stabilization of microtubules at the cell leading edge, which is ...

Journal: :iranian journal of radiation research 0
h. nikjoo dr. h. nikjoo mrc radiation and genome stability unit, harwell, oxfordshire, ox11 oxford, uk. fax: +44 1235 841200

0

2017
Rupali R. Hire Shalini Srivastava Melissa B. Davis Ananda Kumar Konreddy Dulal Panda

Crocin, a component of saffron spice, is known to have an anticancer activity. However, the targets of crocin are not known. In this study, crocin was found to inhibit the proliferation of HCC70, HCC1806, HeLa and CCD1059sk cells by targeting microtubules. Crocin depolymerized both the interphase and mitotic microtubules of different cancer cells, inhibited mitosis and induced multipolar spindl...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1978
J De Mey M Joniau M De Brabander W Moens G Geuens

By using immunoperoxidase cytochemistry at the light and electron microscopic level, microtubles were visualized in a number of "normal" nontumorigenic and transformed tumorigenic cell lines. A well-defined cytoplasmic microtubule complex exists in both normal and transformed interphase cells. The distribution of this complex closely correlates with the cell shape and the degree of cell spreadi...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2002
Nicholas J. Quintyne Trina A. Schroer

Centrosomal dynactin is required for normal microtubule anchoring and/or focusing independently of dynein. Dynactin is present at centrosomes throughout interphase, but dynein accumulates only during S and G2 phases. Blocking dynein-based motility prevents recruitment of dynactin and dynein to centrosomes and destabilizes both centrosomes and the microtubule array, interfering with cell cycle p...

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2004
Becket Feierbach Fulvia Verde Fred Chang

The plus ends of microtubules have been speculated to regulate the actin cytoskeleton for the proper positioning of sites of cell polarization and cytokinesis. In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, interphase microtubules and the kelch repeat protein tea1p regulate polarized cell growth. Here, we show that tea1p is directly deposited at cell tips by microtubule plus ends. Tea1p associ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید