Cut2 proteolysis required for sister-chromatid separation in fission yeast
暂无分享,去创建一个
Tim Hunt | Mitsuhiro Yanagida | Koji Nagao | M. Yanagida | K. Nagao | K. Kumada | T. Hunt | H. Funabiki | Hironori Funabiki | Hiroyuki Yamano | H. Yamano | Kazuki Kumada | Koji Nagao | Kazuki Kumada
[1] C. Lehner,et al. Exit from mitosis is regulated by Drosophila fizzy and the sequential destruction of cyclins A, B and B3. , 1995, The EMBO journal.
[2] M. Yanagida,et al. The product of the spindle formation gene sad1+ associates with the fission yeast spindle pole body and is essential for viability , 1995, The Journal of cell biology.
[3] M. Kirschner,et al. A 20s complex containing CDC27 and CDC16 catalyzes the mitosis-specific conjugation of ubiquitin to cyclin B , 1995, Cell.
[4] Kim Nasmyth,et al. Genes involved in sister chromatid separation are needed for b-type cyclin proteolysis in budding yeast , 1995, Cell.
[5] A. Hershko,et al. The cyclosome, a large complex containing cyclin-selective ubiquitin ligase activity, targets cyclins for destruction at the end of mitosis. , 1995, Molecular biology of the cell.
[6] M. Yanagida,et al. Bypassing anaphase by fission yeast cut9 mutation: requirement of cut9+ to initiate anaphase , 1994, The Journal of cell biology.
[7] J. Thorner,et al. G1 cyclin degradation: the PEST motif of yeast Cln2 is necessary, but not sufficient, for rapid protein turnover , 1994, Molecular and cellular biology.
[8] D. Glover,et al. Expression of N-terminally truncated cyclin B in the Drosophila larval brain leads to mitotic delay at late anaphase. , 1994, Journal of cell science.
[9] Kim Nasmyth,et al. Closing the cell cycle circle in yeast: G2 cyclin proteolysis initiated at mitosis persists until the activation of G1 cyclins in the next cycle , 1994, Cell.
[10] A. Udvardy,et al. S. cerevisiae 26S protease mutants arrest cell division in G2/metaphase , 1993, Nature.
[11] C. Rosen,et al. Defective mitosis due to a mutation in the gene for a fission yeast 26S protease subunit , 1993, Nature.
[12] Andrew W. Murray,et al. Anaphase is initiated by proteolysis rather than by the inactivation of maturation-promoting factor , 1993, Cell.
[13] M. Yanagida,et al. Cell cycle-dependent specific positioning and clustering of centromeres and telomeres in fission yeast , 1993, The Journal of cell biology.
[14] K Nasmyth,et al. Destruction of the CDC28/CLB mitotic kinase is not required for the metaphase to anaphase transition in budding yeast. , 1993, The EMBO journal.
[15] T. Marr,et al. A 13 kb resolution cosmid map of the 14 Mb fission yeast genome by nonrandom sequence-tagged site mapping , 1993, Cell.
[16] K. Maundrell,et al. TATA box mutations in the Schizosaccharomyces pombe nmt1 promoter affect transcription efficiency but not the transcription start point or thiamine repressibility. , 1993, Gene.
[17] B. Futcher,et al. The Cln3‐Cdc28 kinase complex of S. cerevisiae is regulated by proteolysis and phosphorylation. , 1992, The EMBO journal.
[18] A. Hershko,et al. Methylated ubiquitin inhibits cyclin degradation in clam embryo extracts. , 1991, The Journal of biological chemistry.
[19] A. Murray,et al. Cyclin is degraded by the ubiquitin pathway , 1991, Nature.
[20] M. Yanagida,et al. The fission yeast cut1 + gene regulates spindle pole body duplication and has homology to the budding yeast ESP1 gene , 1990, Cell.
[21] J. Mitchison,et al. Continued DNA synthesis after a mitotic block in the double mutant cut1 cdc11 of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. , 1990, Journal of cell science.
[22] Sergio Moreno,et al. Regulation of p34cdc2 protein kinase during mitosis , 1989, Cell.
[23] Andrew W. Murray,et al. The role of cyclin synthesis and degradation in the control of maturation promoting factor activity , 1989, Nature.
[24] I. Hagan,et al. The use of cell division cycle mutants to investigate the control of microtubule distribution in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. , 1988, Journal of cell science.
[25] T. Uemura,et al. Isolation and characterization of Schizosaccharomyces pombe cutmutants that block nuclear division but not cytokinesis , 1986, The EMBO journal.
[26] P. Nurse,et al. Gene required in G1 for commitment to cell cycle and in G2 for control of mitosis in fission yeast , 1981, Nature.