Cover Image

Current Issue

Volume 31 Issue 4: August 22, 2008                           

 

Included in this issue:

Telomere attrition-induced chromosome fusions

CCAR1 recruits Mediator to promoters via nuclear receptors or p53

Biochemical reconstitution of V(D)J recombination

AID interaction with the splicing factor CTNNBL1

UbcH10 controls APC/C activation

Review: Nonhistone lysine acetylation


Featured Article

The Featured Article is freely available to all readers

Wang et al. Chromosome Fusions following Telomere Loss Are Mediated by Single-Strand Annealing

Progressive telomere shortening eventually results in chromosome fusions and genome instability as the cell's ability to distinguish chromosome ends from DNA double-strand breaks is compromised. In fission yeast, such events frequently produce stable survivors with all circular chromosomes. To shed light on the repair pathways that mediate chromosome end fusions and generate circular chromosomes, we have examined a diverse array of DNA repair factors. We show that telomere attrition-induced chromosome fusions are dependent on the fission yeast homologs of Rad52, the ERCC1/XPF endonuclease, the single-stranded DNA-binding protein RPA, and the Srs2 and Werner/Bloom helicases, but not Ku and ligase 4. Consistent with a recombinational mechanism of single-strand annealing, cloned junctions map to four of five homology regions in subtelomeric DNA. A comparison with telomere uncapping caused by the absence of the double-stranded telomere-binding protein Taz1 demonstrates that the circumstances and cause of telomere dysfunction profoundly affect which DNA repair pathway is engaged.


Featured Topic

Ubiquitin and ubiquitin-like modifications play important roles in regulating protein turnover and signal transduction. The following selection of articles highlights some recent advances in our understanding of the diverse biological processes these modifications are involved in and of the mechanisms by which these modifications are targeted to their substrates.

Cdc20: A WD40 Activator for a Cell Cycle Degradation Machine *FREE REVIEW*
Hongtao Yu

The Age of Crosstalk: Phosphorylation, Ubiquitination, and Beyond *FREE PERSPECTIVE*
Tony Hunter

Modulation of the Mitotic Regulatory Network by APC-Dependent Destruction of the Cdh1 Inhibitor Acm1  
Maria Enquist-Newman, Matt Sullivan, and David O. Morgan

cIAP1 and cIAP2 Facilitate Cancer Cell Survival by Functioning as E3 Ligases that Promote RIP1 Ubiquitination  
Mathieu J.M. Bertrand, Snezana Milutinovic, Kathleen M. Dickson, Wai Chi Ho, Alain Boudreault, Jon Durkin, John W. Gillard, James B. Jaquith, Stephen J. Morris, and Philip A. Barker

The CUL7 E3 Ubiquitin Ligase Targets Insulin Receptor Substrate 1 for Ubiquitin-Dependent Degradation  
Xinsong Xu, Antonio Sarikas, Dora C. Dias-Santagata, Georgia Dolios, Pascal J. Lafontant, Shih-Chong Tsai, Wuqiang Zhu, Hidehiro Nakajima, Hisako O. Nakajima, Loren J. Field, Rong Wang, and Zhen-Qiang Pan

CHIP-Mediated Degradation and DNA Damage-Dependent Stabilization Regulate Base Excision Repair Proteins 
Jason L. Parsons, Phillip S. Tait, David Finch, Irina I. Dianova, Sarah L. Allinson, and Grigory L. Dianov

Mechanism and Consequences for Paralog-Specific Sumoylation of Ubiquitin-Specific Protease 25 
Erik Meulmeester, Marion Kunze, He Hsuan Hsiao, Henning Urlaub, and Frauke Melchior

SUMO-2/3 Modification and Binding Regulate the Association of CENP-E with Kinetochores and Progression through Mitosis  
Xiang-Dong Zhang, Jacqueline Goeres, Hong Zhang, Tim J. Yen, Andrew C.G. Porter, and Michael J. Matunis

Dcn1 Functions as a Scaffold-Type E3 Ligase for Cullin Neddylation 
Thimo Kurz, Yang-Chieh Chou, Andrew R. Willems, Nathalie Meyer-Schaller, Marie-Lyn Hecht, Mike Tyers, Matthias Peter, and Frank Sicheri

Previous Featured Topics

 

Top 20 Articles

 

These are the Top 20 Papers by download from the Molecular Cell web site for the last 30 days. You can see the summaries if you are registered, or full text and PDFs if you have subscribed.

Announcements

NEW! LabLinks: Systems Biology
October 3, 2008 - Boston, MA
Free Symposium Organized by Cell Press

Get Cell FREE! If you are an individual employed/studying at an institution located within the U.S. or Canada, and your institution has an online subscription to Cell, you qualify to receive a free personal print subscription to Cell.

Manuscript Submission



Journal Information

Information for Advertisers        Contact Molecular Cell

Individual Subscribers                Institutional Subscribers

Permissions                               Cell Press Job Opportunities

 

Featured Job

Endowment for Scholars
Biomedical Research
The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

UT Southwestern is pleased to announce the continuation of the Endowed Program for Scholars in Biomedical Research. The Program, which is fully funded from private endowment, will provide at least $1,000,000 over four years to support the research activities of each new Assistant Professor (tenure track) appointed to the Program; five will be appointed annually. For more information visit click here.

More Scientific Jobs