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Nuclear Proteins And The Cell Cycle
1972Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the biochemistry of the cell cycle in continuously dividing cells and the biochemical events that are described in G0 cells stimulated to proliferate. It also focuses on the proteins of the mammalian nucleus and the role that they may play in the control of cellular proliferation.
G, Stein, R, Baserga
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Pest sequences in nuclear proteins
International Journal of Biochemistry, 19931. Most of proteins which are rapidly degraded inside eukaryotic cells have been found to contain amino acid sequences (PEST sequences) enriched in proline, acidic residues (glutamic acid and/or aspartic acid) and hydrophilic residues (serine and threonine) (Rogers et al. (1986) Science 234, 364-368). 2.
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Nuclear shuttling: The default pathway for nuclear proteins?
Cell, 1993R A, Laskey, C, Dingwall
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Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Protein Structure, 1978
Brenda Jean Conner, David E. Comings
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Brenda Jean Conner, David E. Comings
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The effect of nuclear RNA on nuclear protein synthesis
Experimental Cell Research, 1963openaire +2 more sources
The nuclear lamins: flexibility in function
Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2012Brian Burke +2 more
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