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      Centriolar SAS-7 acts upstream of SPD-2 to regulate centriole assembly and pericentriolar material formation.

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          Abstract

          The centriole/basal body is a eukaryotic organelle that plays essential roles in cell division and signaling. Among five known core centriole proteins, SPD-2/Cep192 is the first recruited to the site of daughter centriole formation and regulates the centriolar localization of the other components in C. elegans and in humans. However, the molecular basis for SPD-2 centriolar localization remains unknown. Here, we describe a new centriole component, the coiled-coil protein SAS-7, as a regulator of centriole duplication, assembly and elongation. Intriguingly, our genetic data suggest that SAS-7 is required for daughter centrioles to become competent for duplication, and for mother centrioles to maintain this competence. We also show that SAS-7 binds SPD-2 and regulates SPD-2 centriolar recruitment, while SAS-7 centriolar localization is SPD-2-independent. Furthermore, pericentriolar material (PCM) formation is abnormal in sas-7 mutants, and the PCM-dependent induction of cell polarity that defines the anterior-posterior body axis frequently fails. We conclude that SAS-7 functions at the earliest step in centriole duplication yet identified and plays important roles in the orchestration of centriole and PCM assembly.

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          Most cited references66

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          NIH Image to ImageJ: 25 years of image analysis.

          For the past 25 years NIH Image and ImageJ software have been pioneers as open tools for the analysis of scientific images. We discuss the origins, challenges and solutions of these two programs, and how their history can serve to advise and inform other software projects.
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            Galaxy: a comprehensive approach for supporting accessible, reproducible, and transparent computational research in the life sciences

            Increased reliance on computational approaches in the life sciences has revealed grave concerns about how accessible and reproducible computation-reliant results truly are. Galaxy http://usegalaxy.org, an open web-based platform for genomic research, addresses these problems. Galaxy automatically tracks and manages data provenance and provides support for capturing the context and intent of computational methods. Galaxy Pages are interactive, web-based documents that provide users with a medium to communicate a complete computational analysis.
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              A map of the interactome network of the metazoan C. elegans.

              To initiate studies on how protein-protein interaction (or "interactome") networks relate to multicellular functions, we have mapped a large fraction of the Caenorhabditis elegans interactome network. Starting with a subset of metazoan-specific proteins, more than 4000 interactions were identified from high-throughput, yeast two-hybrid (HT=Y2H) screens. Independent coaffinity purification assays experimentally validated the overall quality of this Y2H data set. Together with already described Y2H interactions and interologs predicted in silico, the current version of the Worm Interactome (WI5) map contains approximately 5500 interactions. Topological and biological features of this interactome network, as well as its integration with phenome and transcriptome data sets, lead to numerous biological hypotheses.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Elife
                eLife
                eLife Sciences Organisation, Ltd.
                2050-084X
                2050-084X
                Jan 16 2017
                : 6
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, United States.
                [2 ] Department of Zoology, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, United States.
                [3 ] Basic Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, United States.
                [4 ] Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, University of Washington, Seattle, United States.
                [5 ] Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, United States.
                Article
                10.7554/eLife.20353
                5342823
                28092264
                7de051ec-c266-4e6e-8f97-31a8f6587185
                History

                cell division,C. elegans,cell biology,centriole,centrosome
                cell division, C. elegans, cell biology, centriole, centrosome

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