Background: During the mating pheromone response in budding yeast, activation of a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) cascade results in well-characterized changes in cytoskeletal organization and gene expression. Spatial reorganization of genes within the nucleus has been documented during cell-type differentiation in mammalian cells, but no information was previously available on the morphology of the yeast nucleus during the major transcriptional reprogramming that accompanies zygote formation. Results: We find that in response to mating pheromone, budding yeast nuclei assume an unusual dumbbell shape, reflecting a spatial separation of chromosomal and nucleolar domains. Within the chromosomal domain, telomeric foci persist an...
<p>The cells of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergo a robust morphological cycle, inv...
Nuclear movement before karyogamy in eukaryotes is known as pronuclear migration or as nuclear congr...
AbstractFilamentous invasive growth of S. cerevisiae requires multiple elements of the mitogen-activ...
AbstractBackground: During the mating pheromone response in budding yeast, activation of a mitogen-a...
Mitogen Activated Protein Kinases (MAPK) play a central role in transducing extra-cellular signals i...
SummaryAbnormal nuclear size and shape are hallmarks of aging and cancer [1, 2]. However, the mechan...
Abnormal nuclear size and shape are hallmarks of aging and cancer. However, the mechanisms regulatin...
AbstractBackground: In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, components of a single mitogen-ac...
Abstract Background Like mammalian MAP kinases, the mating-specific Fus3 MAPK of yeast accumulates i...
During mating, budding yeast cells reorient growth toward the highest concentration of pheromone. Bn...
ABSTRACT How nuclear shape correlates with nuclear movements during the cell cycle is poorly underst...
Abstract In eukaryotic organisms, chromosomes are spatially organized within the nucleus. Such nucle...
AbstractThe development of cell polarity in response to external stimuli is a feature of most eukary...
Mating pheromone stimulates a mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activation pathway in Saccharom...
AbstractThe mechanisms whereby different external cues stimulate the same mitogen-activated protein ...
<p>The cells of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergo a robust morphological cycle, inv...
Nuclear movement before karyogamy in eukaryotes is known as pronuclear migration or as nuclear congr...
AbstractFilamentous invasive growth of S. cerevisiae requires multiple elements of the mitogen-activ...
AbstractBackground: During the mating pheromone response in budding yeast, activation of a mitogen-a...
Mitogen Activated Protein Kinases (MAPK) play a central role in transducing extra-cellular signals i...
SummaryAbnormal nuclear size and shape are hallmarks of aging and cancer [1, 2]. However, the mechan...
Abnormal nuclear size and shape are hallmarks of aging and cancer. However, the mechanisms regulatin...
AbstractBackground: In the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, components of a single mitogen-ac...
Abstract Background Like mammalian MAP kinases, the mating-specific Fus3 MAPK of yeast accumulates i...
During mating, budding yeast cells reorient growth toward the highest concentration of pheromone. Bn...
ABSTRACT How nuclear shape correlates with nuclear movements during the cell cycle is poorly underst...
Abstract In eukaryotic organisms, chromosomes are spatially organized within the nucleus. Such nucle...
AbstractThe development of cell polarity in response to external stimuli is a feature of most eukary...
Mating pheromone stimulates a mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase activation pathway in Saccharom...
AbstractThe mechanisms whereby different external cues stimulate the same mitogen-activated protein ...
<p>The cells of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergo a robust morphological cycle, inv...
Nuclear movement before karyogamy in eukaryotes is known as pronuclear migration or as nuclear congr...
AbstractFilamentous invasive growth of S. cerevisiae requires multiple elements of the mitogen-activ...