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Michel Labouesse

Researcher at University of Strasbourg

Publications -  75
Citations -  5771

Michel Labouesse is an academic researcher from University of Strasbourg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Caenorhabditis elegans & Gene. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 75 publications receiving 5458 citations. Previous affiliations of Michel Labouesse include Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University & Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.

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A family of low and high copy replicative, integrative and single‐stranded S. cerevisiae/E. coli shuttle vectors

TL;DR: A set of replicative, integrative and single‐stranded shuttle vectors constructed from the pUC19 plasmid that are used routinely in the authors' experiments and bear a yeast selectable marker: URA3, TRP1 or LEU2.
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RNA interference: genetic wand and genetic watchdog

TL;DR: Recent advances in uncovering the proteins that act during the RNAi process are discussed, discoveries that have revealed enticing links between transposition, transgene silencing and RNAi are discussed.
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The V0-ATPase mediates apical secretion of exosomes containing Hedgehog-related proteins in Caenorhabditis elegans

TL;DR: It is shown that the membrane-bound V0 sector of the vacuolar H+-atPase (V-ATPase) acts in this pathway, independent of its contribution to the V-ATpase proton pump activity, and raised the possibility that the V 0 sector mediates exosome and morphogen release in mammals.
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The sterol-sensing domain: multiple families, a unique role?

TL;DR: How the SSD appears to function as a regulatory domain involved in linking vesicle trafficking and protein localization with such varied processes as cholesterol homeostasis, cell signalling and cytokinesis is discussed.
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A tension-induced mechanotransduction pathway promotes epithelial morphogenesis

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the C. elegans hemidesmosome is not only an attachment structure, but also a mechanosensor that responds to tension by triggering signalling processes that promote epithelial morphogenesis or wound healing in other organisms in which epithelial cells adhere to tension-generating contractile cells.