4 results match your criteria: "USA. Electronic address: JUmen@danforthcenter.org.[Affiliation]"

Understanding how population-size homeostasis emerges from stochastic individual cell behaviors remains a challenge in biology. The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Chlamydomonas) proliferates using a multiple fission cell cycle, where a prolonged G1 phase is followed by n rounds of alternating division cycles (S/M) to produce 2 daughters. A "Commitment" sizer in mid-G1 phase ensures sufficient cell growth before completing the cell cycle.

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Sizing up the cell cycle: systems and quantitative approaches in Chlamydomonas.

Curr Opin Plant Biol

December 2018

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, 975 N. Warson Rd., St. Louis, MO 63132, USA. Electronic address:

The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas provides a simplified model for defining core cell cycle functions conserved in the green lineage and for understanding multiple fission, a common cell cycle variation found in many algae. Systems-level approaches including a recent groundbreaking screen for conditional lethal cell cycle mutants and genome-wide transcriptome analyses are revealing the complex relationships among cell cycle regulators and helping define roles for CDKA/CDK1 and CDKB, the latter of which is unique to the green lineage and plays a central role in mitotic regulation. Genetic screens and quantitative single-cell analyses have provided insight into cell-size control during multiple fission including the identification of a candidate `sizer' protein.

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The evolution of sex determination continues to pose major questions in biology. Sex-determination mechanisms control reproductive cell differentiation and development of sexual characteristics in all organisms, from algae to animals and plants. While the underlying processes defining sex (meiosis and recombination) are conserved, sex-determination mechanisms are highly labile.

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Volvox: A simple algal model for embryogenesis, morphogenesis and cellular differentiation.

Dev Biol

November 2016

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, 975 N Warson Rd, St. Louis, MO 63132, USA. Electronic address:

Patterning of a multicellular body plan involves a coordinated set of developmental processes that includes cell division, morphogenesis, and cellular differentiation. These processes have been most intensively studied in animals and land plants; however, deep insight can also be gained by studying development in simpler multicellular organisms. The multicellular green alga Volvox carteri (Volvox) is an excellent model for the investigation of developmental mechanisms and their evolutionary origins.

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