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John W. Newport

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  8
Citations -  4128

John W. Newport is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mitosis & Xenopus. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 4030 citations.

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A major developmental transition in early xenopus embryos: I. characterization and timing of cellular changes at the midblastula stage

TL;DR: The Xenopus embryo undergoes 12 rapid synchronous cleavages followed by a period of slower asynchronous divisions more typical of somatic cells, termed the midblastula transition (MBT), which shows that at the MBT the blastomeres become motile and transcriptionally active for the first time.
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A major developmental transition in early Xenopus embryos: II. Control of the onset of transcription.

TL;DR: It is shown here that a plasmid containing a cloned gene coding for a yeast leucine tRNA comes under developmental control when injected into cleaving eggs, suggesting that the MBT is triggered by the DNA through titration of suppressor components present in the egg.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regulation of the cell cycle during early Xenopus development

TL;DR: In Xenopus embryos cell-cycle events of the nucleus, including DNA replication and mitosis, are controlled by the level of MPF activity, which is driven by or may be part of an autonomous cell- cycle oscillator.
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Spontaneous formation of nucleus-like structures around bacteriophage DNA microinjected into Xenopus eggs.

TL;DR: Injection of bacteriophage lambda DNA into unfertilized Xenopus eggs causes the assembly around the DNA of structures resembling typical eucaryotic cell nuclei, which suggest that nuclear reassembly and breakdown occur independently of specific DNA sequence information.