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The centrosome cycle: Centriole biogenesis, duplication and inherent asymmetries

Erich A. Nigg, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2011 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 10, pp 1154-1160
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TLDR
The spatial aspects of the centrosome duplication cycle, the mechanism of centriole assembly and the possible consequences of the inherent asymmetry of Centrosomes and centrosomes are discussed.
Abstract
Centrosomes are microtubule-organizing centres of animal cells. They influence the morphology of the microtubule cytoskeleton, function as the base for the primary cilium and serve as a nexus for important signalling pathways. At the core of a typical centrosome are two cylindrical microtubule-based structures termed centrioles, which recruit a matrix of associated pericentriolar material. Cells begin the cell cycle with exactly one centrosome, and the duplication of centrioles is constrained such that it occurs only once per cell cycle and at a specific site in the cell. As a result of this duplication mechanism, the two centrioles differ in age and maturity, and thus have different functions; for example, the older of the two centrioles can initiate the formation of a ciliary axoneme. We discuss spatial aspects of the centrosome duplication cycle, the mechanism of centriole assembly and the possible consequences of the inherent asymmetry of centrioles and centrosomes.

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Citations
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Ciliopatías: bases moleculares y celulares

TL;DR: This analysis seeks to describe the molecular relationship and morfofuncional of the cilium sicks in the organism to allow the elucidation of an important number of genetic illnesses associated to their dysfunction.
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Genetics for the pediatric endocrinologists – 2 Primordial short stature in children and adolescents

TL;DR: The most common genetic etiology is monogenic except for Silver-Russell syndrome, where an epigenetic mechanism is a predominant cause of primordial dwarfism as mentioned in this paper , which is a rare group of monogenic disorders characterized by profound global growth failure commencing in fetal life and continuing postnatally for the rest of the life.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The primary cilium: a signalling centre during vertebrate development

TL;DR: The connections between cilia and developmental signalling have begun to clarify the basis of human diseases associated with ciliary dysfunction, and the cilium represents a nexus for signalling pathways during development.
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A Mechanism Linking Extra Centrosomes to Chromosomal Instability

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that cells with multiple centrosomes rarely undergo multipolar cell divisions, and the progeny of these divisions are typically inviable, and it is proposed that this mechanism may be a common underlying cause of CIN in human cancer.
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Proteomic characterization of the human centrosome by protein correlation profiling

TL;DR: A mass-spectrometry-based proteomic analysis of human centrosomes in the interphase of the cell cycle by quantitatively profiling hundreds of proteins across several centrifugation fractions identified and validated 23 novel components and identified 41 likely candidates as well as the vast majority of the known centrosomal proteins in a large background of nonspecific proteins.
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Hippo signaling: growth control and beyond

TL;DR: Recently discovered mechanisms that contribute to the dynamic regulation of Hippo signaling during Drosophila and vertebrate development are reviewed and exciting new insights are provided into the elusive mechanisms that regulate organ growth and regeneration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cleavage of Cohesin by the CD Clan Protease Separin Triggers Anaphase in Yeast

TL;DR: It is shown here that separin is a cysteine protease related to caspases that alone can cleave Sccl in vitro and depends on a conserved protein called separin for sister chromatid separation.
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