Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cyclin D1 was originally cloned as a breakpoint rearrangement in parathyroid adenoma [5] and was shown to be required for progression through the G1 phase of the cell cycle to induce cell migration, [14] angiogenesis [15] and to induce the Warburg effect. [16] Cyclin D1 is a protein required for progression through the G1 phase of the cell ...
English: Levels of the three major cyclin types oscillate during the cell cycle (top), providing the basis for oscillations in the cyclin–Cdk complexes that drive cell-cycle events (bottom). In general, Cdk levels are constant and in large excess over cyclin levels; thus, cyclin–Cdk complexes form in parallel with cyclin levels.
An RXL motif in some substrates interacts with the hydrophobic patch on the cyclin, thereby enhancing the rate of phosphorylation. The presence of a phosphate-binding pocket on the accessory subunit Cks1 may facilitate interactions with targets that contain multiple phosphorylation sites.
Cyclin D is a member of the cyclin protein family that is involved in regulating cell cycle progression. The synthesis of cyclin D is initiated during G1 and drives the G1/S phase transition. Cyclin D protein is anywhere from 155 (in zebra mussel) to 477 (in Drosophila) amino acids in length. [2]
For example, cyclin F is an orphan cyclin that is essential for G 2 /M transition. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] A study in C. elegans revealed the specific roles of mitotic cyclins. [ 14 ] [ 15 ] Notably, recent studies have shown that cyclin A creates a cellular environment that promotes microtubule detachment from kinetochores in prometaphase to ensure ...
A cyclin-dependent kinase complex (CDKC, cyclin-CDK) is a protein complex formed by the association of an inactive catalytic subunit of a protein kinase, cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK), with a regulatory subunit, cyclin. [1] Once cyclin-dependent kinases bind to cyclin, the formed complex is in an activated state.
The G1 phase cyclin-dependent kinase works together with S phase cyclin-dependent kinase targeting p27 for degradation. In turn, this allows for full activation of Cyclin A:Cdk2, a complex which phosphorylates E2F 1-3 initiating their disassociation from the DNA promoter sites. This allows E2F 6–8 to bind to the DNA and inhibit transcription ...
t(11;14) is a chromosomal translocation which essentially always involves the immunoglobulin heavy locus, also known as IGH in the q32 region of chromosome 14, as well as cyclin D1 which is located in the q13 of chromosome 11 . [2] Specifically, the translocation is at t(11;14)(q13;q32). [3] [4]