Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Piekny A" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Open-space microfluidics as a tool to study signaling dynamics Proulx M; Clapperton-Richard P; Potvin-Trottier L; Piekny A; Gervais T; 40995884
BIOLOGY
2 Surface charge dictates the mechanism of cellular uptake of fluorescent amine passivated carbon dots Clermont-Paquette A; Fuoco G; Brancheriau CR; Piekny A; Naccache R; 40861971
CHEMBIOCHEM
3 Development of dual acid-visible light-degradable core-crosslinked nanogels with extended conjugate aromatic imines for enhanced drug delivery Bairagi K; Shamekhi M; Tountas I; Letourneau N; Peslherbe GH; Piekny A; Oh JK; 40637173
BIOLOGY
4 Endogenous tagging using split mNeonGreen in human iPSCs for live imaging studies Husser MC; Pham NP; Law C; Araujo FRB; Martin VJJ; Piekny A; 38652106
BIOLOGY
5 Advances in the design and use of carbon dots for analytical and biomedical applications Adeola AO; Clermont-Paquette A; Piekny A; Naccache R; 37757783
CHEMBIOCHEM
6 Ratiometric Sensing of Glyphosate in Water Using Dual Fluorescent Carbon Dots Clermont-Paquette A; Mendoza DA; Sadeghi A; Piekny A; Naccache R; 37299928
BIOLOGY
7 Diversity is the spice of life: An overview of how cytokinesis regulation varies with cell type Ozugergin I; Piekny A; 36420142
BIOLOGY
8 Gold Nano-Bio-Interaction to Modulate Mechanobiological Responses for Cancer Therapy Applications Sohrabi Kashani A; Larocque K; Piekny A; Packirisamy M; 35839330
BIOLOGY
9 Diverse mechanisms regulate contractile ring assembly for cytokinesis in the two-cell C. elegans embryo Ozugergin I; Mastronardi K; Law C; Piekny A; 35022791
BIOLOGY
10 Characterization of a recently synthesized microtubule-targeting compound that disrupts mitotic spindle poles in human cells Jaunky DB; Larocque K; Husser MC; Liu JT; Forgione P; Piekny A; 34880347
BIOLOGY
11 Design, structure-activity relationship study and biological evaluation of the thieno[3,2-c]isoquinoline scaffold as a potential anti-cancer agent Liu JT; Jaunky DB; Larocque K; Chen F; Mckibbon K; Sirouspour M; Taylor S; Shafeii A; Campbell D; Braga H; Piekny A; Forgione P; 34416378
BIOLOGY
12 Seeing is believing: tools to study the role of Rho GTPases during cytokinesis Koh SP; Pham NP; Piekny A; 34405757
BIOLOGY
13 Using intracellular plasmonics to characterize nanomorphology in human cells. Sohrabi Kashani A, Piekny A, Packirisamy M 33365137
BIOLOGY
14 Multi-tissue patterning drives anterior morphogenesis of the C. elegans embryo. Grimbert S, Mastronardi K, Richard V, Christensen R, Law C, Zardoui K, Fay D, Piekny A 33309948
BIOLOGY
15 Anillin Controls the Rho Zone. Piekny A 32893380
BIOLOGY
16 Importin-binding mediates the intramolecular regulation of anillin during cytokinesis. Beaudet D, Pham N, Skaik N, Piekny A 32238082
BIOLOGY
17 Complementary functions for the Ran gradient during division. Ozugergin I, Piekny A 32013678
BIOLOGY
18 Active Ran regulates anillin function during cytokinesis. Beaudet D, Akhshi T, Phillipp J, Law C, Piekny A 28931593
BIOLOGY
19 Dual disassembly and biological evaluation of enzyme/oxidation-responsive polyester-based nanoparticulates for tumor-targeting delivery. Hong SH, Larocque K, Jaunky DB, Piekny A, Oh JK 30223243
CHEMBIOCHEM

 

Title:Diverse mechanisms regulate contractile ring assembly for cytokinesis in the two-cell C. elegans embryo
Authors:Ozugergin IMastronardi KLaw CPiekny A
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35022791/
DOI:10.1242/jcs.258921
Publication:Journal of cell science
Keywords:ContractilityCytokinesisMyosinRan GTPaseRhoA GTPase
PMID:35022791 Category: Date Added:2022-01-13
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Biology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC H4B 1R6, Canada.

Description:

Cytokinesis occurs at the end of mitosis due to the ingression of a contractile ring that cleaves the daughter cells. The core machinery regulating this crucial process is conserved among metazoans. Multiple pathways control ring assembly, but their contribution in different cell types is not known. We found that in the C. elegans embryo, AB and P1 cells fated to be somatic tissue and germline, respectively, have different cytokinesis kinetics supported by distinct myosin levels and organization. Through perturbation of RhoA or polarity regulators and the generation of tetraploid strains, we found that ring assembly is controlled by multiple fate-dependent factors that include myosin-levels, and mechanisms that respond to cell size. Active Ran coordinates ring position with the segregating chromatids in HeLa cells by forming an inverse gradient with importins that control the cortical recruitment of anillin. We found that the Ran pathway regulates anillin in AB cells, but functions differently in P1 cells. We propose that ring assembly delays in P1 cells caused by low myosin and Ran signaling coordinate the timing of ring closure with their somatic neighbours.





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