Ciona intestinalis Nucleolus
※ Nucleolus introduction The nucleolus is the most obvious spherical structure in the intercellular nucleus of eukaryotic cells. Phase separation occurs during the nucleolus formation. In the process of nucleolus formation, fibrillarin (FIB1) and nucleophosmin (NPM1) are putatively driver proteins for the subcompartmentalized organization of the nucleolus (1). Arginine-containing DPRs can impair nucleolar dynamics and function in live cells. Besides, the first 21 amino acids of the N-terminus were essential for nucleolar localization, while portion of NRG1-h3 has been proved to prevent nucleolar accumulation in all cells. Reference
1. Golding, M., Ruhrberg, C., Sandle, J., & Gullick, W. J. (2004) Mapping nucleolar and spliceosome localization sequences of neuregulin1-beta3. Exp Cell Res, 299(1), 110-8. PMID: 15302578
There are 902 genes. Reviewed (0) or Unreviewed (902)
※ Nucleolus introduction The nucleolus is the most obvious spherical structure in the intercellular nucleus of eukaryotic cells. Phase separation occurs during the nucleolus formation. In the process of nucleolus formation, fibrillarin (FIB1) and nucleophosmin (NPM1) are putatively driver proteins for the subcompartmentalized organization of the nucleolus (1). Arginine-containing DPRs can impair nucleolar dynamics and function in live cells. Besides, the first 21 amino acids of the N-terminus were essential for nucleolar localization, while portion of NRG1-h3 has been proved to prevent nucleolar accumulation in all cells. Reference
1. Golding, M., Ruhrberg, C., Sandle, J., & Gullick, W. J. (2004) Mapping nucleolar and spliceosome localization sequences of neuregulin1-beta3. Exp Cell Res, 299(1), 110-8. PMID: 15302578
There are 902 genes. Reviewed (0) or Unreviewed (902)