Publications by authors named "Doris McLean"

Article Synopsis
  • Mutations in Drosophila merry-go-round (mgr) lead to abnormal cell division and disruption of spindles, but the specific protein it encodes was previously unknown.
  • Research reveals that mgr encodes a Prefoldin protein similar to human von Hippel Lindau binding-protein 1, crucial for maintaining microtubule stability in cells.
  • Mgr and von Hippel Lindau protein (Vhl) work together to manage tubulin levels, with Vhl helping to degrade misfolded tubulin when Prefoldin is not functioning properly, highlighting their roles in regulating tubulin stability.
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The potential to differentiate human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) in vitro to provide an unlimited source of human hepatocytes for use in biomedical research, drug discovery, and the treatment of liver diseases holds great promise. Here we describe a three-stage process for the efficient and reproducible differentiation of hESCs to hepatocytes by priming hESCs towards definitive endoderm with activin A and sodium butyrate prior to further differentiation to hepatocytes with dimethyl sulfoxide, followed by maturation with hepatocyte growth factor and oncostatin M. We have demonstrated that differentiation of hESCs in this process recapitulates liver development in vivo: following initial differentiation, hESCs transiently express characteristic markers of the primitive streak mesendoderm before turning to the markers of the definitive endoderm; with further differentiation, expression of hepatocyte progenitor cell markers and mature hepatocyte markers emerged sequentially.

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Disruption of the function of the A-type Aurora kinase of Drosophila by mutation or RNAi leads to a reduction in the length of astral microtubules in syncytial embryos, larval neuroblasts, and cultured S2 cells. In neuroblasts, it can also lead to loss of an organized centrosome and its associated aster from one of the spindle poles, whereas the centrosome at the other pole has multiple centrioles. When centrosomes are present at the poles of aurA mutants or aurA RNAi spindles, they retain many antigens but are missing the Drosophila counterpart of mammalian transforming acidic coiled coil (TACC) proteins, D-TACC.

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