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Stephen S. Taylor

Researcher at University of Manchester

Publications -  110
Citations -  14325

Stephen S. Taylor is an academic researcher from University of Manchester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Spindle checkpoint & Kinetochore. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 110 publications receiving 13110 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen S. Taylor include University of Oxford & University of California.

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Aurora B couples chromosome alignment with anaphase by targeting BubR1, Mad2, and Cenp-E to kinetochores

TL;DR: It is shown that BubR1 is not only required for spindle checkpoint function, but is also required for chromosome alignment, which suggests that by targeting checkpoint proteins to kinetochores, Aurora B couples chromosome alignment with anaphase onset.
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Cancer Cells Display Profound Intra- and Interline Variation following Prolonged Exposure to Antimitotic Drugs

TL;DR: An automated time-lapse light microscopy approach is used to systematically analyze over 10,000 single cells from 15 cell lines in response to three different classes of antimitotic drug, showing that the variation in cell behavior is far greater than previously recognized.
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The spindle assembly checkpoint.

TL;DR: Recent progress is reviewed in understanding of how the checkpoint signal is generated, how it blocks cell cycle progression and how it is extinguished.
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Polo-like kinase-1 is activated by aurora A to promote checkpoint recovery

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the initial activation of PLK1 is a primary function of aurora A, and that Bora/aurora-A-dependent phosphorylation is a prerequisite for PLK 1 to promote mitotic entry after a checkpoint-dependent arrest.
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Aurora-kinase inhibitors as anticancer agents.

TL;DR: The kinases Aurora-A, -B and -C represent a family of such targets and several small-molecule inhibitors have been shown to block their function and their in vivo antitumour activity has recently been reported.