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tag mitotic spindle cell molecular biology

distance
Cathy Holding(cholding@hgmp.mrc.ac.uk) | Oct 1, 2003 | 1 min read
Formation of the mitotic spindle occurs by interaction with chromatin at a distance
Top 7 in molecular biology
Megan Scudellari | Feb 28, 2011 | 3 min read
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in molecular biology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
Top 7 in cancer biology
Jef Akst | Mar 28, 2011 | 3 min read
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in cancer biology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
Top 7 in Cancer Biology
Tia Ghose | Oct 3, 2011 | 3 min read
A snapshot of the most highly ranked articles in cancer biology and related areas, from Faculty of 1000
Sophie Dumont: Forces at Play
Kerry Grens | May 1, 2014 | 3 min read
Assistant Professor, Department of Cell & Tissue Biology, University of California, San Francisco. Age: 38
Cell Biologist Andreas Doncic Dies
Kerry Grens | May 7, 2018 | 2 min read
The young UT Southwestern professor studied cell fate in yeast and was about to publish the first results from his lab.
Investigating Molecular Motors Step by Step
Jeffrey Perkel | Mar 14, 2004 | 10+ min read
Thom Graves MediaThe audience, several hundred biophysicists strong, was not expecting a James Brown impersonation. But there he was: Physiologist Yale Goldman, keynote speaker on motility at the Biophysical Society's annual meeting, doing his "asymmetric hand-over-hand motility dance with a limp" to tinny strains of "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag." And while Goldman, who eschewed Brown's trademark, over-the-top couture for understated, Ivy League-issue khakis and blue blazer, won't star on MTV any
Thinking Big
Karen Hopkin | Sep 1, 2008 | 6 min read
Marc Kirschner likes to expose biology's essential processes, such as how a simple microtubule can form such a variety of structures. Lucky for biology.
Tony Hyman wins EMBO Gold Medal
Martina Habeck(m.habeck@gmx.net) | Aug 3, 2003 | 2 min read
EMBO award goes to cell biologist for work on cell division mechanisms
Getting Proteins Into Cells
Laura Bonetta | Apr 1, 2002 | 9 min read
A postdoctoral fellow has just identified an interesting new gene. But to get published in a top-flight journal, there's a need to figure out what the gene product does in vivo. Unfortunately, to accomplish that, the postdoc needs a way to get the protein into the cell, and therein lies the problem: There are many fast and effective methods to introduce transcriptionally active DNA into cells,1 but options for delivering functional proteins into cells are limited. New research and commercially a

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