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The centrosome cycle: Centriole biogenesis, duplication and inherent asymmetries
by
Nigg, Erich A.
, Stearns, Tim
in
631/80/128/1965
/ 631/80/641
/ Animals
/ Asymmetry
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biosynthesis
/ Cancer Research
/ Cell Biology
/ Cell cycle
/ Cell Cycle - genetics
/ Centrioles - genetics
/ Centrioles - physiology
/ Centrosome - physiology
/ Centrosomes
/ Cilia - physiology
/ Developmental Biology
/ DNA damage
/ Genomic Instability
/ Humans
/ Insects
/ Kinases
/ Life Sciences
/ Microtubules
/ Mitosis - genetics
/ Physiological aspects
/ Proteins
/ review-article
/ Signal Transduction
/ Stem Cells
/ Symmetry
2011
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The centrosome cycle: Centriole biogenesis, duplication and inherent asymmetries
by
Nigg, Erich A.
, Stearns, Tim
in
631/80/128/1965
/ 631/80/641
/ Animals
/ Asymmetry
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biosynthesis
/ Cancer Research
/ Cell Biology
/ Cell cycle
/ Cell Cycle - genetics
/ Centrioles - genetics
/ Centrioles - physiology
/ Centrosome - physiology
/ Centrosomes
/ Cilia - physiology
/ Developmental Biology
/ DNA damage
/ Genomic Instability
/ Humans
/ Insects
/ Kinases
/ Life Sciences
/ Microtubules
/ Mitosis - genetics
/ Physiological aspects
/ Proteins
/ review-article
/ Signal Transduction
/ Stem Cells
/ Symmetry
2011
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The centrosome cycle: Centriole biogenesis, duplication and inherent asymmetries
by
Nigg, Erich A.
, Stearns, Tim
in
631/80/128/1965
/ 631/80/641
/ Animals
/ Asymmetry
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biosynthesis
/ Cancer Research
/ Cell Biology
/ Cell cycle
/ Cell Cycle - genetics
/ Centrioles - genetics
/ Centrioles - physiology
/ Centrosome - physiology
/ Centrosomes
/ Cilia - physiology
/ Developmental Biology
/ DNA damage
/ Genomic Instability
/ Humans
/ Insects
/ Kinases
/ Life Sciences
/ Microtubules
/ Mitosis - genetics
/ Physiological aspects
/ Proteins
/ review-article
/ Signal Transduction
/ Stem Cells
/ Symmetry
2011
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The centrosome cycle: Centriole biogenesis, duplication and inherent asymmetries
Journal Article
The centrosome cycle: Centriole biogenesis, duplication and inherent asymmetries
2011
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Overview
Centrosomes are microtubule-organizing centres of animal cells. They influence the morphology of the microtubule cytoskeleton, function as the base for the primary cilium and serve as a nexus for important signalling pathways. At the core of a typical centrosome are two cylindrical microtubule-based structures termed centrioles, which recruit a matrix of associated pericentriolar material. Cells begin the cell cycle with exactly one centrosome, and the duplication of centrioles is constrained such that it occurs only once per cell cycle and at a specific site in the cell. As a result of this duplication mechanism, the two centrioles differ in age and maturity, and thus have different functions; for example, the older of the two centrioles can initiate the formation of a ciliary axoneme. We discuss spatial aspects of the centrosome duplication cycle, the mechanism of centriole assembly and the possible consequences of the inherent asymmetry of centrioles and centrosomes.
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