AbstractBackground: Degradation of the mitotic cyclins is a hallmark of the exit from mitosis. Induction of stable versions of each of the three mitotic cyclins of Drosophila, cyclins A, B, and B3, arrests mitosis with different phenotypes. We tested a recent proposal that the destruction of the different cyclins guides progress through mitosis.Results: Real-time imaging revealed that arrest phenotypes differ because each stable cyclin affects specific mitotic events differently. Stable cyclin A prolonged or blocked chromosome disjunction, leading to metaphase arrest. Stable cyclin B allowed the transition to anaphase, but anaphase A chromosome movements were slowed, anaphase B spindle elongation did not occur, and the monooriented disjoine...
AbstractAnaphase, mitotic exit, and cytokinesis proceed in rapid succession, and while mitotic exit ...
SummaryIn the presence of unattached/weakly attached kinetochores, the spindle assembly checkpoint (...
Two mitotic cyclin types, cyclin A and B, exist in higher eukaryotes, but their specialised function...
AbstractBackground: Cytokinesis occurs just as chromosomes complete segregation and reform nuclei. I...
SummaryThe timing mechanism for mitotic progression is still poorly understood. The spindle assembly...
The timing mechanism for mitotic progression is still poorly understood. The spindle assembly checkp...
AbstractSequences outside the ‘destruction box’ direct the degradation of cyclin A to completion bef...
Cyclins are key cell cycle regulators, yet few analyses test their role in timing the events that th...
While entry into mitosis is triggered by activation of cdc2 kinase, exit from mitosis requires inact...
AbstractBackground: Exit from mitosis is a tightly regulated event. This process has been studied in...
AbstractBackground: In response to DNA damage, fission yeast, mammalian cells, and cells of the Dros...
SummaryTwo mechanisms safeguard the bipolar attachment of chromosomes in mitosis. A correction mecha...
AbstractSuccessful mitosis requires that anaphase chromosomes sustain a commitment to move to their ...
AbstractAnaphase, mitotic exit, and cytokinesis proceed in rapid succession, and while mitotic exit ...
SummaryIn the presence of unattached/weakly attached kinetochores, the spindle assembly checkpoint (...
Two mitotic cyclin types, cyclin A and B, exist in higher eukaryotes, but their specialised function...
AbstractBackground: Cytokinesis occurs just as chromosomes complete segregation and reform nuclei. I...
SummaryThe timing mechanism for mitotic progression is still poorly understood. The spindle assembly...
The timing mechanism for mitotic progression is still poorly understood. The spindle assembly checkp...
AbstractSequences outside the ‘destruction box’ direct the degradation of cyclin A to completion bef...
Cyclins are key cell cycle regulators, yet few analyses test their role in timing the events that th...
While entry into mitosis is triggered by activation of cdc2 kinase, exit from mitosis requires inact...
AbstractBackground: Exit from mitosis is a tightly regulated event. This process has been studied in...
AbstractBackground: In response to DNA damage, fission yeast, mammalian cells, and cells of the Dros...
SummaryTwo mechanisms safeguard the bipolar attachment of chromosomes in mitosis. A correction mecha...
AbstractSuccessful mitosis requires that anaphase chromosomes sustain a commitment to move to their ...
AbstractAnaphase, mitotic exit, and cytokinesis proceed in rapid succession, and while mitotic exit ...
SummaryIn the presence of unattached/weakly attached kinetochores, the spindle assembly checkpoint (...
Two mitotic cyclin types, cyclin A and B, exist in higher eukaryotes, but their specialised function...