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Kathleen L. Gould

Researcher at Vanderbilt University

Publications -  233
Citations -  15753

Kathleen L. Gould is an academic researcher from Vanderbilt University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizosaccharomyces pombe & Cytokinesis. The author has an hindex of 69, co-authored 206 publications receiving 15016 citations. Previous affiliations of Kathleen L. Gould include University of California, San Diego & University of Washington.

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Tyrosine phosphorylation of the fission yeast cdc2 + protein kinase regulates entry into mitosis

TL;DR: The cdc2+ protein kinase (pp34) is found to be phosphorylated on tyrosine as well as serine and threonine residues in exponentially growing Schizosaccharomyces pombe, establishing that tyrosines phosphorylation/dephosphorylation directly regulates pp34 function.
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Shotgun identification of protein modifications from protein complexes and lens tissue

TL;DR: This work describes a process for the analysis of posttranslational modifications that is simple, robust, general, and can be applied to complicated protein mixtures and lens tissue from a patient with congenital cataracts.
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Tyr527 is phosphorylated in pp60c-src: implications for regulation.

TL;DR: Results suggest that the increase in transforming ability and kinase activity that occurred in the genesis of pp60v-src may have resulted from the loss of a tyrosine involved in negative regulation.
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Substrate specificity of protein kinase C: use of synthetic peptides corresponding to physiological sites as probes for substrate recognition requirements

TL;DR: Comparative studies have demonstrated that, in vivo, the enzyme exhibits a preference for one basic residue C-terminal to the phosphorylatable residue, as in the sequence: Ser/Thr-Xaa-Lys/Arg, where Xaa is usually an uncharged residue.
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Phosphorylation at Thr167 is required for Schizosaccharomyces pombe p34cdc2 function.

TL;DR: It is established that Thr167 phosphorylation is required for p34CDc2 kinase activity at mitosis and is involved in the association of p34cdc2 with cyclin B, and might also play a role in the exit from mitosis.