نتایج جستجو برای: tetraploidy

تعداد نتایج: 1945  

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2007
Mitch Leslie

A neuploidy is a hallmark of cancer, but the path from mutation to extra chromosomes is unclear. Now, Caldwell et al. help fi ll this gap, showing that a cancer-causing mutation promotes chromosome doubling by unfastening the mitotic spindle and hindering cell division. The genome of a cancer cell is a mess, with breaks, rearrangements, and super-fl uous chromosomes. Many researchers speculate ...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2008
Zuzana Storchova Christian Kuffer

Polyploidy, an increased number of chromosome sets, is a surprisingly common phenomenon in nature, particularly in plants and fungi. In humans, polyploidy often occurs in specific tissues as part of terminal differentiation. Changes in ploidy can also result from pathophysiological events that are caused by viral-induced cell fusion or erroneous cell division. Tetraploidization can initiate chr...

2010
Ryan N. Contreras John M. Ruter Brian M. Schwartz

Japanese-cedar [Cryptomeria japonica (L.f.) D. Don] represents an alternative to leyland cypress [·Cuprocyparis leylandii (A.B. Jacks. & Dallim.) Farjon] as an evergreen screen or specimen plant for landscapes. It performs well under a range of soil and environmental conditions but has been underused attributable, in part, to unsightly winter browning caused by photoinhibition. In previous stud...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
David B Mark Welch Jessica L Mark Welch Matthew Meselson

Rotifers of class Bdelloidea have evolved for millions of years apparently without sexual reproduction. We have sequenced 45- to 70-kb regions surrounding the four copies of the hsp82 gene of the bdelloid rotifer Philodina roseola, each of which is on a separate chromosome. The four regions comprise two colinear gene-rich pairs with gene content, order, and orientation conserved within each pai...

2010
Margaret R. Woodhouse James C. Schnable Brent S. Pedersen Eric Lyons Damon Lisch Shabarinath Subramaniam Michael Freeling

Previous work in Arabidopsis showed that after an ancient tetraploidy event, genes were preferentially removed from one of the two homologs, a process known as fractionation. The mechanism of fractionation is unknown. We sought to determine whether such preferential, or biased, fractionation exists in maize and, if so, whether a specific mechanism could be implicated in this process. We studied...

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