AbstractBackground: The Drosophila central nervous system develops from stem cell like precursors called neuroblasts, which divide unequally to bud off a series of smaller daughter cells called ganglion mother cells. Neuroblasts show cell-cycle-specific asymmetric localization of both RNA and proteins: at late interphase, prospero RNA and Inscuteable, Prospero and Staufen proteins are all apically localized; at mitosis, Inscuteable remains apical whereas prospero RNA, Prospero protein and Staufen protein form basal cortical crescents. Here we use in vitro culture of neuroblasts to investigate the role of intrinsic and extrinsic cues and the cytoskeleton in asymmetric localization of Inscuteable, Prospero and Staufen proteins.Results: Neurob...
In the Drosophila embryonic central nervous system, the neural precursor cells called neuroblasts un...
AbstractDrosophila neuroblast asymmetric divisions generate two daughters of unequal size and fate. ...
A central question in developmental biology is how can two genetically equivalent cells become diffe...
AbstractBackground: The Drosophila central nervous system develops from stem cell like precursors ca...
AbstractWhen neuroblasts divide, inscuteable acts to coordinate protein localization and mitotic spi...
AbstractBackground: In the fruit fly Drosophila, the Inscuteable protein localises to the apical cel...
AbstractThe Drosophila Inscuteable protein acts as a key regulator of asymmetric cell division durin...
AbstractThe cytoplasmic determinants Numb and Prospero are distributed asymmetrically into the daugh...
AbstractAsymmetric localization is a prerequisite for inscuteable (insc) to function in coordinating...
Asymmetric cell division is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism widely used to generate cellular d...
How cells position their proteins is a key problem in cell biology. Targeting mRNAs to distinct regi...
SummaryAsymmetric cell division is a conserved mechanism to generate cellular diversity during anima...
SummaryBackgroundAsymmetric cell division (ACD) is a key process that allows different cell types to...
AbstractDrosophila neuroblasts undergo asymmetric divisions along the apicobasal axis to produce two...
AbstractAsymmetric division of Drosophila neuroblasts, sensory organ precursor cells, and cells in t...
In the Drosophila embryonic central nervous system, the neural precursor cells called neuroblasts un...
AbstractDrosophila neuroblast asymmetric divisions generate two daughters of unequal size and fate. ...
A central question in developmental biology is how can two genetically equivalent cells become diffe...
AbstractBackground: The Drosophila central nervous system develops from stem cell like precursors ca...
AbstractWhen neuroblasts divide, inscuteable acts to coordinate protein localization and mitotic spi...
AbstractBackground: In the fruit fly Drosophila, the Inscuteable protein localises to the apical cel...
AbstractThe Drosophila Inscuteable protein acts as a key regulator of asymmetric cell division durin...
AbstractThe cytoplasmic determinants Numb and Prospero are distributed asymmetrically into the daugh...
AbstractAsymmetric localization is a prerequisite for inscuteable (insc) to function in coordinating...
Asymmetric cell division is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism widely used to generate cellular d...
How cells position their proteins is a key problem in cell biology. Targeting mRNAs to distinct regi...
SummaryAsymmetric cell division is a conserved mechanism to generate cellular diversity during anima...
SummaryBackgroundAsymmetric cell division (ACD) is a key process that allows different cell types to...
AbstractDrosophila neuroblasts undergo asymmetric divisions along the apicobasal axis to produce two...
AbstractAsymmetric division of Drosophila neuroblasts, sensory organ precursor cells, and cells in t...
In the Drosophila embryonic central nervous system, the neural precursor cells called neuroblasts un...
AbstractDrosophila neuroblast asymmetric divisions generate two daughters of unequal size and fate. ...
A central question in developmental biology is how can two genetically equivalent cells become diffe...