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Nuclear division in yeast: cell cycle control; microtubule motor proteins and the cytoskeleton. Telephone: (919) 962-2331 E-mail: elaine_yeh@unc.edu Office: 603 Fordham Hall Mailing Address:
Research Associate Professor (Initial Appointment: 1992) |
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Accurate chromosome segregation at each cell division is one of the most fundamental processes in a living organism.
This Spindles are longer in histone depleted cells (kinetochores in green, SPBs in red) The site of microtubule attachment to the chromosome is the kinetochore, a complex of over 60 proteins assembled at a specific site on the chromosome, the centromere. Almost every kinetochore protein identified in yeast is conserved throughout phylogeny and the organization of the kinetochore in yeast may serve as the fundamental unit of attachment for mammalian cells. More recently we have become interested in the role of two different classes of ATP binding proteins, cohesions (Smc3, Scc1) and chromatin remodeling factors (Cac1, Hir1, Rdh54), in the structural organization of the kinetochore and how these classes of proteins contribute to the fidelity of chromosome segregation.
Smc3-GFP Spc29-RFP Merge
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Yeast Cell (MPEG Viewer - 635K) Yeast-dynein (Quick Time Viewer - 6912K) | |
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