All Stories

  1. The histone code reader PHD finger protein 7 controls sex-linked disparities in gene expression and malignancy in Drosophila
  2. Centrobin is essential for C-tubule assembly and flagellum development in Drosophila melanogaster spermatogenesis
  3. Drosophila Larval Brain Neoplasms Present Tumour-Type Dependent Genome Instability
  4. An in vivo genetic screen in Drosophila identifies the orthologue of human cancer/testis gene SPO11 among a network of targets to inhibit lethal(3)malignan...
  5. Prefoldin and Pins synergistically regulate asymmetric division and suppress dedifferentiation
  6. Arl2- and Msps-dependent microtubule growth governs asymmetric division
  7. The translational relevance ofDrosophilain drug discovery
  8. A last-minute decision
  9. Studying tumor growth in Drosophila using the tissue allograft method
  10. Loss of Centrobin Enables Daughter Centrioles to Form Sensory Cilia in Drosophila
  11. Time-lapse recording of centrosomes and other organelles in Drosophila neuroblasts
  12. Quantitative differences, qualitative outcomes
  13. When fate follows age: unequal centrosomes in asymmetric cell division
  14. The Brm-HDAC3-Erm repressor complex suppresses dedifferentiation in Drosophila type II neuroblast lineages
  15. Structure and Non-Structure of Centrosomal Proteins
  16. Drosophila melanogaster: a model and a tool to investigate malignancy and identify new therapeutics
  17. Centrobin controls mother–daughter centriole asymmetry in Drosophila neuroblasts
  18. On the inscrutable role of Inscuteable: structural basis and functional implications for the competitive binding of NuMA and Inscuteable to LGN
  19. Drosophila Mgr, a Prefoldin subunit cooperating with von Hippel Lindau to regulate tubulin stability
  20. Hsp90 inhibition differentially destabilises MAP kinase and TGF-beta signalling components in cancer cells revealed by kinase-targeted chemoproteomics
  21. Synergism between altered cortical polarity and the PI3K/TOR pathway in the suppression of tumour growth
  22. An Ana2/Ctp/Mud Complex Regulates Spindle Orientation in Drosophila Neuroblasts
  23. Drosophila neuroblasts retain the daughter centrosome
  24. Ectopic Expression of Germline Genes Drives Malignant Brain Tumor Growth in Drosophila
  25. Interplay between the Transcription Factor Zif and aPKC Regulates Neuroblast Polarity and Self-Renewal
  26. Neural stem cells: the need for a proper orientation
  27. Time‐Lapse Imaging of Embryonic Neural Stem Cell Division in Drosophila by Two‐Photon Microscopy
  28. The interphase microtubule aster is a determinant of asymmetric division orientation inDrosophilaneuroblasts
  29. Biased segregation of DNA and centrosomes — moving together or drifting apart?
  30. Spindle alignment is achieved without rotation after the first cell cycle in Drosophila embryonic neuroblasts
  31. Polyhomeotic has a tumor suppressor activity mediated by repression of Notch signaling
  32. 08-P016 Maintenance of the orientation of polarity in Drosophila larval brain neuroblasts
  33. S07-05 Neural stem cell polarity and malignant growth in Drosophila
  34. Below the Convergence
  35. Centrosome function during stem cell division: the devil is in the details
  36. Drosophila asymmetric division, polarity and cancer
  37. Centrosome Dysfunction in Drosophila Neural Stem Cells Causes Tumors that Are Not Due to Genome Instability
  38. Cayetano Gonzalez
  39. Spermatocyte cytokinesis requires rapid membrane addition mediated by ARF6 on central spindle recycling endosomes
  40. Asterless Is a Centriolar Protein Required for Centrosome Function and Embryo Development in Drosophila
  41. Spindle orientation, asymmetric division and tumour suppression in Drosophila stem cells
  42. Functionally Unequal Centrosomes Drive Spindle Orientation in Asymmetrically Dividing Drosophila Neural Stem Cells
  43. Localized transfection with magnetic beads coated with PCR products and other nucleic acids
  44. Connecting Cancer to the Asymmetric Division of Stem Cells
  45. Induction of tumor growth by altered stem-cell asymmetric division in Drosophila melanogaster
  46. Structure and microtubule-nucleation activity of isolated Drosophila embryo centrosomes characterized by whole mount scanning and transmission electron microscopy
  47. Localized transfection on arrays of magnetic beads coated with PCR products
  48. Contribution of Noncentrosomal Microtubules to Spindle Assembly in Drosophila Spermatocytes
  49. γ-Tubulin function during female germ-cell development and oogenesis in Drosophila
  50. Cell Division: The Place and Time of Cytokinesis
  51. Drosophila dd4 mutants reveal that gammaTuRC is required to maintain juxtaposed half spindles in spermatocytes
  52. Cdc37 is essential for chromosome segregation and cytokinesis in higher eukaryotes
  53. Computer-aided design of a PDZ domain to recognize new target sequences
  54. Miranda, a protein involved in neuroblast asymmetric division, is associated with embryonic centrosomes of Drosophila melanogaster
  55. Organized microtubule arrays in γ-tubulin-depleted Drosophila spermatocytes
  56. Requirement of Hsp90 for centrosomal function reflects its regulation of Polo kinase stability
  57. Patterns of Cell Division and Expression of Asymmetric Cell Fate Determinants in Postembryonic Neuroblast Lineages of Drosophila
  58. Dominant-negative mutant dynein allows spontaneous centrosome assembly, uncouples chromosome and centrosome cycles
  59. Light, flies and cell division
  60. Vaccinia virus infection disrupts microtubule organization and centrosome function
  61. Visualizing the spindle checkpoint inDrosophilaspermatocytes
  62. Protein traps: using intracellular localization for cloning
  63. Interactions between mgr , asp , and polo : asp function modulated by polo and needed to maintain the poles of monopolar and bipolar spindles
  64. Microinjection of Drosophila Eggs
  65. TheDrosophilaGeneabnormal spindleEncodes a Novel Microtubule-associated Protein That Associates with the Polar Regions of the Mitotic Spindle
  66. Essential role for gamma -tubulin in the acentriolar female meiotic spindle of Drosophila
  67. 16 Methods in Drosophila Cell Cycle Biology
  68. Transposable elements map in a conserved pattern of distribution extending from beta-heterochromatin to centromeres in Drosophila melanogaster
  69. Molecular analysis of ribosomal DNA from the aphid Amphorophora idaei and an associated fungal organism
  70. Cell Cycle Genes of Drosophila
  71. The Centrosome
  72. Cell type-specific gene expression in the Drosophila melanogaster male accessory gland
  73. Regulation of the G1-S transition in postembryonic neuronal precursors by axon ingrowth
  74. Applications of confocal laser scanning microscopy
  75. polo encodes a protein kinase homolog required for mitosis in Drosophila.
  76. The spindle is required for the process of sister chromatid separation in Drosophila neuroblasts
  77. Cyclical Changes in the Subcellular Distribution of Proteins Essential for Mitosis during Embryogenesis in Drosophila
  78. Relationship between chromosome content and nuclear diameter in early spermatids ofDrosophila melanogaster
  79. Transcripts of one of two Drosophila cyclin genes become localized in pole cells during embryogenesis
  80. Towards the genetic dissection of mitosis inDrosophila
  81. Time-Lapse Imaging of Male Meiosis by Phase-Contrast and Fluorescence Microscopy