Ares M, Jr
Published in
Cell
I have determined the structure of the gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae coding for the yeast homolog of vertebrate U2 snRNA. Surprisingly, the RNA is 1175 nucleotides long, six times larger than U2 RNAs from other organisms, including Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Nearly 100 nucleotides of the large RNA share sequence homology and potential secondar...
Hong, K Lindsay Hinck Nishiyama, M Poo, Mm Tessier-Lavigne, M Stein, E
Published in
Cell
Netrins are bifunctional: they attract some axons and repel others. Netrin receptors of the Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC) family are implicated in attraction and those of the UNC5 family in repulsion, but genetic evidence also suggests involvement of the DCC protein UNC-40 in some cases of repulsion. To test whether these proteins form a recep...
Cancer Genome Atlas, Network
Published in
Cell
We describe the landscape of genomic alterations in cutaneous melanomas through DNA, RNA, and protein-based analysis of 333 primary and/or metastatic melanomas from 331 patients. We establish a framework for genomic classification into one of four subtypes based on the pattern of the most prevalent significantly mutated genes: mutant BRAF, mutant R...
J, Han Js, Pedersen Sc, Kwon Cd, Belair Yk, Kim Kh, Yeom Wy, Yang D, Haussler R, Blelloch Vn, Kim
...
Published in
Cell
The Drosha-DGCR8 complex, also known as Microprocessor, is essential for microRNA (miRNA) maturation. Drosha functions as the catalytic subunit, while DGCR8 (also known as Pasha) recognizes the RNA substrate. Although the action mechanism of this complex has been intensively studied, it remains unclear how Drosha and DGCR8 are regulated and if thes...
John Tamkun Deuring, R Scott, Mp Kissinger, M Pattatucci, Am Kaufman, Tc Kennison, Ja
Published in
Cell
The brahma (brm) gene is required for the activation of multiple homeotic genes in Drosophila. Loss-of-function brm mutations suppress mutations in Polycomb, a repressor of homeotic genes, and cause developmental defects similar to those arising from insufficient expression of the homeotic genes of the Antennapedia and Bithorax complexes. The brm g...
Hoadley, Katherine A Yau, Christina Wolf, Denise M Cherniack, Andrew D Tamborero, David Ng, Sam Leiserson, Max D M Niu, Beifang McLellan, Michael D Uzunangelov, Vladislav
...
Published in
Cell
Recent genomic analyses of pathologically defined tumor types identify "within-a-tissue" disease subtypes. However, the extent to which genomic signatures are shared across tissues is still unclear. We performed an integrative analysis using five genome-wide platforms and one proteomic platform on 3,527 specimens from 12 cancer types, revealing a u...
Susan Strome Wood, Wb
Published in
Cell
Germ-line granules in C. elegans embryos (P granules) can be visualized by immunofluorescence microscopy using a monoclonal antibody. In mutant zygotes with abnormal spindle orientations and in wild-type zygotes treated with the microtubule inhibitors nocodazole, colcemid, vinblastine, and griseofulvin, both P-granule segregation to the posterior p...
Kawasaki, I Shim, Yh Kirchner, J Kaminker, J Wood, Wb Susan Strome
Published in
Cell
Germ cells are distinct from somatic cells in their immortality, totipotency, and ability to undergo meiosis. Candidates for components that guide the unique germline program are the distinctive granules observed in germ cells of many species. We show that a component of germ granules is essential for fertility in C. elegans and that its primary fu...
Keino-Masu, K Masu, M Lindsay Hinck Leonardo, Ed Chan, Ss Culotti, Jg Tessier-Lavigne, M
Published in
Cell
The guidance of developing axons in the nervous system is mediated partly by diffusible chemoattractants secreted by axonal target cells. Netrins are chemoattractants for commissural axons in the vertebrate spinal cord, but the mechanisms through which they produce their effects are unknown. We show that Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC), a transm...
Johnson, Tracy L Ares, Manuel Jr
Published in
Cell
Splicing occurs co-transcriptionally, but relative rates of splicing and transcription that might reveal mechanisms of their coordinated control have remained mysterious. Now, Carrillo Oesterreich et al. show that the fastest introns are gone nearly as soon as the 3' splice site is transcribed and that introns have distinct splicing kinetics with r...