AbstractFor more than a decade, cell, developmental and cancer investigators have brought about a wide interest in the biology of catenin proteins, an attraction being their varied functions within differing cellular compartments. While the diversity of catenin localizations and roles has been intriguing, it has also posed a challenge to the clear interpretation of loss- or gain-of-function developmental phenotypes. The most deeply studied member of the larger catenin family is beta-catenin, whose contributions span areas including cell adhesion and intracellular signaling/ transcriptional control. More recently, attention has been directed towards p120-catenin, which in conjunction with the p120-catenin sub-family members ARVCF- and delta-...
AbstractThe intracellular protein p120 catenin aids in maintenance of cell–cell adhesion by regulati...
P120-catenin is essential to vertebrate development, modulating cadherin and small-GTPase functions,...
The canonical and non-canonical Wnt signaling pathways appear to interact with one another as a netw...
AbstractFor more than a decade, cell, developmental and cancer investigators have brought about a wi...
p120 catenin (p120ctn), a component of the cadherin-catenin complex, was the first member to be iden...
AbstractModulators of cadherin function are of great interest given that the cadherin complex active...
p120-catenin (p120) is the prototypical member of a subclass of armadillo-related proteins that incl...
Catenins have diverse and powerful roles in embryogenesis, homeostasis or disease progression, as be...
Abstract Background Catenin is a gene family composed of three subfamilies; p120, beta and alpha. Be...
Abstractp120-catenin was first described in 1989 as a Src substrate whose phosphorylation correlated...
Summaryp120-catenin is an Arm repeat protein that interacts with varied components such as cadherin,...
The Wnt pathways contribute to many processes in cancer and developmental biology, with β-catenin be...
AbstractP120-catenin is essential to vertebrate development, modulating cadherin and small-GTPase fu...
Summaryβ-catenin-dependent or canonical Wnt signals are fundamental in animal development and tumor ...
P120-catenin is a member of the Armadillo protein family, which is involved in intercellular adhesio...
AbstractThe intracellular protein p120 catenin aids in maintenance of cell–cell adhesion by regulati...
P120-catenin is essential to vertebrate development, modulating cadherin and small-GTPase functions,...
The canonical and non-canonical Wnt signaling pathways appear to interact with one another as a netw...
AbstractFor more than a decade, cell, developmental and cancer investigators have brought about a wi...
p120 catenin (p120ctn), a component of the cadherin-catenin complex, was the first member to be iden...
AbstractModulators of cadherin function are of great interest given that the cadherin complex active...
p120-catenin (p120) is the prototypical member of a subclass of armadillo-related proteins that incl...
Catenins have diverse and powerful roles in embryogenesis, homeostasis or disease progression, as be...
Abstract Background Catenin is a gene family composed of three subfamilies; p120, beta and alpha. Be...
Abstractp120-catenin was first described in 1989 as a Src substrate whose phosphorylation correlated...
Summaryp120-catenin is an Arm repeat protein that interacts with varied components such as cadherin,...
The Wnt pathways contribute to many processes in cancer and developmental biology, with β-catenin be...
AbstractP120-catenin is essential to vertebrate development, modulating cadherin and small-GTPase fu...
Summaryβ-catenin-dependent or canonical Wnt signals are fundamental in animal development and tumor ...
P120-catenin is a member of the Armadillo protein family, which is involved in intercellular adhesio...
AbstractThe intracellular protein p120 catenin aids in maintenance of cell–cell adhesion by regulati...
P120-catenin is essential to vertebrate development, modulating cadherin and small-GTPase functions,...
The canonical and non-canonical Wnt signaling pathways appear to interact with one another as a netw...