Publications by authors named "Danielle Ringhoff"

Background: Stathmin (STMN1) protein functions to regulate assembly of the microtubule cytoskeleton by destabilizing microtubule polymers. Stathmin over-expression has been correlated with cancer stage progression, while stathmin depletion leads to death of some cancer cell lines in culture. In contrast, stathmin-null mice are viable with minor axonopathies and loss of innate fear response.

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Stathmin is a microtubule-destabilizing protein ubiquitously expressed in vertebrates and highly expressed in many cancers. In several cell types, stathmin regulates the partitioning of tubulin between unassembled and polymer forms, but the mechanism responsible for partitioning has not been determined. We examined stathmin function in two cell systems: mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) isolated from embryos +/+, +/-, and -/- for the stathmin gene and porcine kidney epithelial (LLCPK) cells expressing stathmin-cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) or injected with stathmin protein.

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Mutations in BRCA1 account for a significant proportion of hereditary breast and ovarian cancers, but analysis of BRCA1 function is complicated by pleiotropic effects and binding partners (Pol II holoenzyme and transcription factors, chromatin remodelers, recombination complexes and E3 ligases). In vertebrate cells, efforts to elucidate BRCA1 transcriptional effects have focused on specific genes or restricted portions of the genome-limiting analyses of BRCA1 effects on adjoining DNA sequences and along chromosome lengths. Here, we use microarray analyses on the genetically tractable yeast cell system to elucidate BRCA1-dependent genomewide positional effects on both gene induction and repression.

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A fluorescently labeled, persulfated molecular umbrella ( 1) has been synthesized from cholic acid, lysine, spermine, and Coumarin 343 and found capable of entering live HeLa cells. The distributions of 1 throughout the cytoplasm and the nucleus were diffuse and punctate, respectively. This finding, together with its ability to cross liposomal membranes by passive diffusion, suggests that passive diffusion plays a significant role in the ability of 1 to enter cells.

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