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Institution

University of Dundee

EducationDundee, United Kingdom
About: University of Dundee is a education organization based out in Dundee, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Protein kinase A. The organization has 19258 authors who have published 39640 publications receiving 1919433 citations. The organization is also known as: Universitas Dundensis & Dundee University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
25 May 2007-Science
TL;DR: This work reports that CB1 cannabinoid receptors are enriched in the axonal growth cones of γ-aminobutyric acid–containing interneurons in the rodent cortex during late gestation and demonstrates that endocannabinoid signaling regulates synaptogenesis and target selection in vivo.
Abstract: The roles of endocannabinoid signaling during central nervous system development are unknown. We report that CB(1) cannabinoid receptors (CB(1)Rs) are enriched in the axonal growth cones of gamma-aminobutyric acid-containing (GABAergic) interneurons in the rodent cortex during late gestation. Endocannabinoids trigger CB(1)R internalization and elimination from filopodia and induce chemorepulsion and collapse of axonal growth cones of these GABAergic interneurons by activating RhoA. Similarly, endocannabinoids diminish the galvanotropism of Xenopus laevis spinal neurons. These findings, together with the impaired target selection of cortical GABAergic interneurons lacking CB(1)Rs, identify endocannabinoids as axon guidance cues and demonstrate that endocannabinoid signaling regulates synaptogenesis and target selection in vivo.

489 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that PSP1 accumulates in a new nucleoplasmic compartment, termed paraspeckles, that also contains at least two other protein components: PSP2 and p54/nrb.

488 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mice lacking the p110δ catalytic subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase have reduced numbers of B1 and marginal zone B cells, reduced levels of serum immunoglobulins, respond poorly to immunization with type II thymus-independent antigen, and are defective in their primary and secondary responses to thymUS-dependent antigen.
Abstract: Mice lacking the p110δ catalytic subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase have reduced numbers of B1 and marginal zone B cells, reduced levels of serum immunoglobulins, respond poorly to immunization with type II thymus-independent antigen, and are defective in their primary and secondary responses to thymus-dependent antigen. p110δ−/− B cells proliferate poorly in response to B cell receptor (BCR) or CD40 signals in vitro, fail to activate protein kinase B, and are prone to apoptosis. p110δ function is required for BCR-mediated calcium flux, activation of phosphlipaseCγ2, and Bruton's tyrosine kinase. Thus, p110δ plays a critical role in B cell homeostasis and function.

487 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A PI3K- and Akt-independent pathway mediated by mTORC1 regulates expression of HIF1 in CD8+ T cells and is required to sustain glucose metabolism and regulate cell trafficking.
Abstract: mTORC1 (mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1) controls transcriptional programs that determine CD8 + cytolytic T cell (CTL) fate. In some cell systems, mTORC1 couples phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K) and Akt to the control of glucose uptake and glycolysis. However, PI3K–Akt-independent mechanisms control glucose metabolism in CD8 + T cells, and the role of mTORC1 has not been explored. The present study now demonstrates that mTORC1 activity in CD8 + T cells is not dependent on PI3K or Akt but is critical to sustain glucose uptake and glycolysis in CD8 + T cells. We also show that PI3K- and Akt-independent pathways mediated by mTORC1 regulate the expression of HIF1 (hypoxia-inducible factor 1) transcription factor complex. This mTORC1–HIF1 pathway is required to sustain glucose metabolism and glycolysis in effector CTLs and strikingly functions to couple mTORC1 to a diverse transcriptional program that controls expression of glucose transporters, multiple rate-limiting glycolytic enzymes, cytolytic effector molecules, and essential chemokine and adhesion receptors that regulate T cell trafficking. These data reveal a fundamental mechanism linking nutrient and oxygen sensing to transcriptional control of CD8 + T cell differentiation.

486 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A reliable affinity purification strategy to identify specific interactors that combines quantitative SILAC-based mass spectrometry with characterization of common contaminants binding to affinity matrices (bead proteomes) is presented.
Abstract: The identification of interaction partners in protein complexes is a major goal in cell biology. Here we present a reliable affinity purification strategy to identify specific interactors that combines quantitative SILAC-based mass spectrometry with characterization of common contaminants binding to affinity matrices (bead proteomes). This strategy can be applied to affinity purification of either tagged fusion protein complexes or endogenous protein complexes, illustrated here using the well-characterized SMN complex as a model. GFP is used as the tag of choice because it shows minimal nonspecific binding to mammalian cell proteins, can be quantitatively depleted from cell extracts, and allows the integration of biochemical protein interaction data with in vivo measurements using fluorescence microscopy. Proteins binding nonspecifically to the most commonly used affinity matrices were determined using quantitative mass spectrometry, revealing important differences that affect experimental design. These data provide a specificity filter to distinguish specific protein binding partners in both quantitative and nonquantitative pull-down and immunoprecipitation experiments.

486 citations


Authors

Showing all 19404 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Matthias Mann221887230213
Mark I. McCarthy2001028187898
Stefan Schreiber1781233138528
Kenneth C. Anderson1781138126072
Masayuki Yamamoto1711576123028
Salvador Moncada164495138030
Jorge E. Cortes1632784124154
Andrew P. McMahon16241590650
Philip Cohen154555110856
Dirk Inzé14964774468
Andrew T. Hattersley146768106949
Antonio Lanzavecchia145408100065
Kim Nasmyth14229459231
David Price138168793535
Dario R. Alessi13635474753
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202361
2022205
20211,653
20201,520
20191,473
20181,524