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Peripherally conditioned sensory neurons have an increased capacity to regenerate their central processes. However, even conditioned axons struggle in the presence of a hostile CNS environment. We hypothesized that combining an aggressive... more
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      NeuroscienceSpinal CordNerve RegenerationProteoglycans
Macrophage-mediated axonal dieback presents an additional challenge to regenerating axons after spinal cord injury. Adult adherent stem cells are known to have immunomodulatory capabilities, but their potential to ameliorate this... more
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      NeuroscienceImmunohistochemistryMacrophagesWestern blotting
Regeneration of injured adult CNS axons is inhibited by formation of a glial scar. Immature astrocytes are able to support robust neurite outgrowth and reduce scarring, therefore, we tested whether these cells would have this effect if... more
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      Cognitive ScienceDevelopmental NeurobiologyRegenerationImmunohistochemistry
Spinal cord injuries (SCI) often occur at the cervical level above the phrenic motor pools, which innervate the diaphragm. Unfortunately, the untoward effects of impaired breathing are a leading cause of SCI-related death, underscoring... more
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      NeurosciencePhysiologyRegenerationMotor neuron
Recently, it has been suggested that nuclear processes, such as replication, transcription, and splicing, are spatially organized and associated with a nuclear framework called the nuclear matrix, a structure of unknown molecular... more
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The interaction of chromatin with the nuclear matrix via matrix attachment region (MAR) DNA is considered to be of fundamental importance for chromatin organization in all eukaryotic cells. MAR binding filament-like protein 1 (MFP1) from... more
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      GeneticsPlant BiologyMembrane ProteinsTomato
Background: Animal and yeast proteins containing long coiled-coil domains are involved in attaching other proteins to the large, solid-state components of the cell. One subgroup of long coiled-coil proteins are the nuclear lamins, which... more
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      Biological SciencesTomatoNuclear envelopeHuman Disease
Long alpha-helical coiled-coil proteins are involved in a variety of organizational and regulatory processes in eukaryotic cells. They provide cables and networks in the cyto- and nucleoskeleton, molecular scaffolds that organize membrane... more
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      PhysiologyCytoskeletonCell DivisionClinical Sciences
The small GTPase Ran is involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport, spindle formation, nuclear envelope (NE) formation, and cell-cycle control. In vertebrates, these functions are controlled by a three-dimensional gradient of Ran-GTP to... more
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      Plant BiologyTobaccoCell CycleCell Division
The RBCS3A gene of tomato belongs to a small gene family consisting of ®ve members. Although the RBCS1, RBCS2 and RBCS3A promoters contain closely related cis regulatory sequences, the expression patterns of the genes are different.... more
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      Plant BiologyTranscription FactorsSaccharomyces cerevisiaePlant
Plastid DNA, like bacterial and mitochondrial DNA, is organized into protein-DNA complexes called nucleoids. Plastid nucleoids are believed to be associated with the inner envelope in developing plastids and the thylakoid membranes in... more
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      Plant BiologyTobaccoMitochondrial DNAPhosphorylation
Ran is a small signaling GTPase that is involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport. Two additional functions of animal Ran in the formation of spindle asters and the reassembly of the nuclear envelope in mitotic cells have been recently... more
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      MultidisciplinaryMacromolecular X-Ray CrystallographyGreen Fluorescent ProteinArabidopsis
43212 (S.M., S.J.S., M.A.M., E.A.S.)
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      AlgorithmsMembrane ProteinsBiological SciencesPlant Genome Project
This review summarizes our present knowledge about the composition and function of the plant nuclear envelope. Compared with animals or yeast, our molecular understanding of the nuclear envelope in higher plants is in its infancy.... more
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      Plant BiologyCell CycleSignal TransductionProtein Structure and Function
Background: Long alpha-helical coiled-coil proteins are involved in diverse organizational and regulatory processes in eukaryotic cells. They provide cables and networks in the cyto-and nucleoskeleton, molecular scaffolds that organize... more
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      Evolutionary BiologyGeneticsProtein FoldingMolecular Evolution
Vertebrate Tpr and its yeast homologs Mlp1/Mlp2, long coiled-coil proteins of nuclear pore inner basket filaments, are involved in mRNA export, telomere organization, spindle pole assembly, and unspliced RNA retention. We identified... more
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      GeneticsPlant BiologyArabidopsis thalianaFlowers
Plastid DNA, like bacterial and mitochondrial DNA, is organized into protein±DNA complexes called nucleoids. Plastid nucleoids are believed to be associated with the inner envelope in developing plastids and the thylakoid membranes in... more
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      Fluorescence MicroscopyConfocal MicroscopyBiological SciencesCell line
Ran is a multifunctional small GTPase that is involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport, mitotic spindle assembly, and nuclear envelope formation. Nuclear import of Ran relies on a small RanGDP-binding protein, Nuclear Transport Factor 2... more
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    •   65  
      GeneticsMicrobiologyRNAPhotosynthesis
The G-box Is a cls-acting DNA sequence present in several plant promoters that are regulated by diverse signals such as UV Irradiation, anaerobiosis, absclssic acid and light. Several baslc/leuclne zipper (bZIP) proteins from different... more
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      Biological SciencesEnvironmental SciencesNucleic AcidsVegetables
The eukaryotic nucleus has been proposed to be organized by two interdependent nucleoprotein structures, the DNA-based chromatin and the RNA-dependent nuclear matrix. The functional composition and molecular organization of the second... more
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    •   15  
      Electron MicroscopyMass SpectrometryProteomicsConfocal Microscopy