ebook img

Journal of Cell Biology 2002: Vol 159 Table of Contents PDF

15 Pages·2002·0.72 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview Journal of Cell Biology 2002: Vol 159 Table of Contents

Editor-In-Chief Ira Mellman Editors Lewis Cantley Louis F. Reichardt Don W. Cleveland Randy Schekman Elaine Fuchs Kenneth M. Yamada Alan Hall News Editors Nicole LeBrasseur William A. Wells Review Editors Karen Dell Louis F. Reichardt Editorial Board Angelika Amon Scott Emr Gerard Karsenty Tom A. Rapoport Kathryn Anderson Werner Franke Hynda Kleinman Anne Ridley Ben Barres Larry Gerace Douglas Koshland Howard Riezman Hugo Bellen Larry Goldstein Teymuras Kurzchalia Daniel B. Rifkin Andrew Belmont Barry Gumbiner Arthur D. Lander David Ron Vann Bennett Ulrich Hartl Jeanne Lawrence Mark Rose Juan Bonifacino Rebecca Heald Leslie Leinwand Joshua Sanes Tony Bretscher Nobutaka Hirokawa Richard Lewis Richard Scheller Marianne Bronner-Fraser Arthur Horwich Laura Machesky Trina Schroer EricJ. Brown Alan Rick Horwitz Joan Massague Martin Schwartz Joan Brugge M. Andrew Hoyt Jacopo Meldolesi Jean Schwarzbauer Kevin P. Campbell Tony Hunter Tom Misteli Shoichiro Tsukita Caroline Damsky Ed Hurt Timothy J. Mitchison David L. Vaux Pietro De Camilli Tony Hyman Randall T. Moon Graham Warren Elisabetta Dejana Kenneth Jacobson David Morgan Colin Watts Ray Deshaies Keith Joiner Leslie Parise Judith White David Drubin Rudy Juliano Mark Peifer Junying Yuan William Earnshaw Eric Karsenti Daphne Preuss Marino Zerial Managing Editor Michael T. Rossner Tel.: (212) 327-8881 | Fax: (212) 327-8576 E-mail: [email protected] Volume 159, 2002 Editorial Assistants Jackie Holloway | Helen Lee | Sati Motieram | Heather Vlach The Rockefeller University Press 1114 First Avenue, New York, NY 10021 Tel.: (212) 327-8581 | Fax: (212) 327-8576 E-mail: [email protected] Copyediting and Production Published biweekly by Dorrit Blakeslee | Greg S. Boustead The Rockefeller University Press Gregory E. Koutrouby j Colleen M. Smith www.jcb.org Suzanne M. Runyan, Production Director Aisha Caruth, Copy Editing Coordinator Electronic Publishing Robert J. O’Donnell, Electronic Publishing Director Erinn A. Grady, Electronic Publishing Coordinator Copyright © 2002 by The Rockefeller University Press Volume 159 | No. 1 October 14, 2002 - News - - Research Articles - In This Issue Reports • Calcium increases the appetite The yeast DHHC cysteine-rich • Big proteins Ran into import difficulties domain protein Akri p • Neutrophils choose the right direction is a paimitoyl transferase • A GAP in COPI vesicle formation is filled • Everyone needs a home A.F. Roth, Y. Feng, L. Chen, and N.G. Davis N. LeBrasseur Nogo-A expressed in Schwann cells Research Roundup impairs axonal regeneration after • Old and unattracted 14 On the Cover peripheral nerve injury • Electrical healing Calcium (green) prompts C. Pot, M. Simonen, O. Weinmann, • MS as a disease of immaturity release of integrins L. Schnell, F. Christ, S. Stoeclde, P. Berger, • The real role of reelin (white) in neutrophils. T. Riilicke, U. Surer, and M.E. Schwab • Adenovirus takes the back door The integrins can then congregate around the W.A. Wells phagocytic cup engulfing MAL2, a novel raft protein of the MAL a b.a cterium. See page family, is an essential component 181 - Reviews - of the machinery for transcytosis in hepatoma HepG2 cells Mini-Reviews M.C. de Marco, F. Marn'n-Belmonte, L. Kremer, J.P. Albar, 1. Correas, J.P. Vaerman, Cajal bodies and coilin—moving 17 M. Marazuela, J.A. Byrne, and M.A. Alonso towards function Articles S.C. Ogg and A.I. Lamond Both midzone and astral microtubules are involved in the delivery of cytokinesis signals: insights from the mobility of aurora B M. Murata-Hori and Y.-l. Wang Influence of cargo size on Ran and energy requirements for nuclear protein import S.K. Lyman, T. Guan, J. Bednenko, H. Wodrich, and L. Gerace ARFGAP1 promotes the formation of COPI vesicles, suggesting function as a component of the coat J.-S. Yang, S.Y. Lee, M. Gao, S. Bourgoin, P.A. Randazzo, R.T. Premont, and V.W. Hsu Articles with related stories in the In This Issue section have page numbers in red. TGFp induces GDNF responsiveness 157 Articles (cont.) in neurons by recruitment of GFRal Calcium-regulated exocytosis to the plasma membrane of dense-core vesicles requires the H. Peterziel, K. Unsicker, and K. Kriegistein activation of ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF)6 by ARF nucleotide binding site DAP-kinase induces apoptosis by 169 opener at the plasma membrane suppressing integrin activity and N. Vitale, S. Chasserot-Golaz, Y. Bailly, disrupting matrix survival signals N. Morinaga, M.A. Frohman, and M.-F. Bader W.-J. Wang, J.-C. Kuo, C.-C. Yao, and R.-H. Chen An intracellular signaling hierarchy determines direction of migration Cytosolic free Ca^^ changes and 181 in opposing chemotactic gradients calpain activation are required for B. Heit, S. Tavener, E. Raharjo, and P. Kubes P integrin-accelerated phagocytosis by human neutrophils Gabl and SHP-2 promote Ras/MAPK 103 A combination of bone S. Dewitt and M.B. Fiallett regulation of epidermal growth morphogenetic protein (BMP) and retinoic acid and differentiation signaling can cause T. Cai, K. Nishida, T. Hirano, and P.A. Khavari transdifferentiation of preadipogenic cells (top) into bone cells (bottom). The LIM-only protein FHL2 interacts 113 See page 135. with P-catenin and promotes differentiation of mouse myoblasts B. Martin, R. Schneider, S. Janetzky, Z. Waibler, P. Pandur, M. Kiihl, J. Behrens, K. von der Mark, A. Starzinski-Powirz, and V. Wixler Myogenic specification of side population cells in skeletal muscle A. Asakura, P. Seale, A. Girgis-Gabardo, and M.A. Riidnicki Bone morphogenetic protein and retinoic acid signaling cooperate to induce osteoblast differentiation of preadipocytes J. Skillington, L. Choy, and R. Derv’nck Side population (SP) .. ._ cells from muscle can Insulin receptor substrate-2 maintains ' form hematopoietic col¬ predominance of anabolic function onies in vitro (top) but over catabolic function of osteoblasts form muscle cells when cocultured with other T. Akune, N. Ogata, K. Hoshi, N. Kubota, muscle cells (bottom) or Y. Terauchi, K. Tobe, H. Takagi, Y. Azuma, injected into a muscle. T. Kadowaki, K. Nakamura, and H. Kawaguchi See page 123. 11 TThe^ Jo.u rnal of ^ | Biolow Volume 159 1 No. 2 October 28, 2002 - News - - Research Articles - In This Issue • A motor for neurofilaments Unfolded cholera toxin is transferred • Initiate then elongate to the ER membrane and released • Building the pore from protein disulfide isomerase upon oxidation by Erol • Chromosomal cliques • Gazing into the gap B. Tsai and T.A. Rapoport Tuberous sclerosis complex Research Roundup tumor suppressor-mediated On the Cover S6 kinase inhibition by • Choose a side DUP/Cdtl (red) oper¬ • Little PIP, little PIP, let me in ates close to ORC2 (yel¬ phosphatidylinositide-3-OH low) during DNA kinase is mTOR independent • Branching out requires VEGF (purple) replication ini¬ • An amidation a day keeps apoptosis away tiation at a fly chorion A. Jaeschke, J. Hankamp, M. Saitoh, amplification region. At W. Roworth, T. Nobukuni, A. Hodges, • Arrested cells are Mad as Hec a later, distinct stage of J. Sampson, G. Thomas, and R. Lamb elongation DUP/Cdtl N. LeBrasseur continues to be active. See page 225. Visualization of replication initiation - Reviews - and elongation in Drosophila J.M. Claycomb, D.M. MacAlpine, J.G. Evans, Comments S.P. Bell, and T.L. Orr-Weaver The face of TSR revealed: an extracellular signaling Chromosomes are predominantly domain is exposed located randomly with respect to each other in interphase human cells R.L. Silverstein M. N. Cornforth, K.M. Greulich-Bode, B.D. Loucas, J. Arsuaga, M. Vazquez, R.K. Sachs, M. Bruckner, M. Molls, P. Hahnfeldt, L. Hlatky, and D.J. Brenner Distinct cell cycle-dependent roles for dynactin and dynein at centrosomes N. J. Quintyne and T.A. Schroer Assembly of centrosomal proteins and microtubule organization depends on PCM-1 Articles with related stories in A. Dammermann and A. Merdes the In This Issue section have page numbers in red; articles with Comments have page numbers in blue. Articles (cont.) The L-type voltage-dependent 337 Ca^^ channel EGL-19 controls Karyopherins in nuclear pore body wall muscle function biogenesis: a role for Kap121p in Caenorhabditis elegans in the assembly of Nup53p into M. Jospin, V. Jacquemond, M.-C. Mariol, nuclear pore complexes L. Segalat, and B. Allard C. P. Lusk, T. Makhnevych, M. Marelli, J.D. Aitchison, and R.W. Wozniak Identification of amino acid 349 residues lining the pore Myosin Va binding to neurofilaments 279 Dominant-negative of a gap junction channel PCM-1 (green) inhibits is essential for correct myosin Va microtubule (red) an¬ M. Skerrett, J. Aronowitz, J.H. Shin, G. Cymes, distribution and transport choring but not nucle- E. Kasperek, F.L. Cao, and B.J. Nicholson and neurofilament density ation at the centrosome. See page 255. M.V. Rao, L.J. Engle, P.S. Mohan, A. Yuan, Distinct claudins and associated PDZ 361 D. Qiu, A. Cataldo, L. Hassinger, S. Jacobsen, proteins form different autotypic tight V.M-Y. Lee, A. Andreadis, J.-P. julien, junctions in myelinating Schwann cells P.C. Bridgman, and R.A. Nixon S. Poliak, S. Matlis, C. Ullmer, S.S. Scherer, and E. Peles Ca^^-controlled competitive 291 diacylglycerol binding of protein Crystal structure of the TSP-1 type 1 373 kinase C isoenzymes in living cells repeats: a novel layered fold and its J. C. Lenz, H.P. Reusch, N. Albrecht, biological implication G. Schultz, and M. Schaefer K. Tan, M. Duquette, J.-h. Liu, Y. Dong, R. Zhang, A. Joachimiak, J. Lawler, Recapitulation of embryonic 303 and J.-h. Wang neuroendocrine differentiation in adult human pancreatic duct cells expressing neurogenin 3 Y. Heremans, M. Van De Casteele, P. in’t Veld, G. Gradwohl, P. Serup, O. Madsen, D. Pipeleers, and H. Heimberg Down-regulation of Delta 313 by proteolytic processing K. Mishra-Gorur, M.D. Rand, B. Perez-Villamil, and S. Artavanis-Tsakonas Delta cleavage may be important to down- Central role of a7 nicotinic receptor 325 regulate Notch signaling, in differentiation of the stratified as the Delta cleavage product D1EC has little squamous epithelium effect on eye develop¬ ment (top) compared to j. Arredondo, V.T. Nguyen, A.l. Chernyavsky, that of full-length Delta D. Bercovich, A. Orr-Urtreger, W. Kummer, (bottom). See page 313. K. Lips, D.E. Vetter, and S.A. Grando 11 The Journal of ^ j Biology Volume 159 | No. 3 November 11, 2002 - News - Research Articles - In This issue • cGMP steers axons home Gag proteins of the two Drosophila • ECM communicates with MMP telomeric retrotransposons are • Tension seals axons fate targeted to chromosome ends • E-Cadherin in a stabilizing relationship • Ribosomes pile up S. Rashkova, S.E. Karam, R. Kellum, and M.-L. Pardue N. LeBrasseur Research Roundup Accumulation of endoplasmic membranes and novel membrane- • Flicking the chromosome-attachment On the Cover switch bound ribosome-signal recognition The f. coli SRP receptor • Repressing differentiation particle receptor complexes FtsY brings ribosomes to • Switch to survival the membrane, even in in Escherichia coli • An unlikely culprit in prion diseases the absence of the SRP. A.A. Herskovits, E. Shimoni, A. Minsky, • Transcriptional segregation Membrane-bound FtsY- and E. Bibi ribosome complexes ac¬ W.A. Wells cumulate when down¬ stream components, such as SecE (shown) or - Reviews - SRP elements, are de¬ Signal recognition particle RNA pleted. See page 403. localization within the nucleolus Comments differs from the classical sites of ribosome synthesis Unchain my heart, baby let me go— J.C. Politz, L.B. Lewandowski, and T. Pederson the entry and intracellular transport of HIV Mutant DMPff 3-UTR B. Sodeik transcripts disrupt C2C12 myogenic differentiation by compromising MyoD J.D. Amack, S.R. Reagan, and M.S. Mahadevan Rootletin, a novel coiled-coil protein, is a structural component of the ciliary rootlet J. Yang, X. Liu, G. Yue, M. Adamian, O. Bulgakov, and T. Li Visualization of the intracellular behavior of HIV in living cells D. McDonald, M.A. Vodicka, G. Lucero, Articles with related stories in T.M. Svitkina, G.G. Borisy, M. Emerman, the In This Issue section have page numbers in red; articles and T.J. Hope with Comments have page numbers in blue. Mechanical tension can specify axonal Articles (cont.) fate in hippocampal neurons EGF controls the in vivo P. I.amoureux, G. Ruthel, R.E. Buxbaum, developmental potential of a and S.R. Heidemann mammary epithelial cell line possessing progenitor properties ECM regulates MT1-MMP localization M.-A. Deugnier, M.M. Faraldo, B. Janji, with pi or avp3 integrins at distinct P. Rousselle, J.P. Thiery, and M.A. Glukhova HIV (green) uses dynein cell compartments modulating its and microtubules of in¬ internalization and activity on human A novel role for pi 20 catenin fected cells to migrate endothelial cells to the nucleus. Without in E-cadherin function dynein (bottom cell), B.G. Galvez, S. Man'as-Roman, M. Yanez-M6, R.C. Ireton, M.A. Davis, J. van Hengel, migration to the perinu¬ F. Sanchez-Madrid, and A.G. Arroyo clear region is blocked. D.J. Mariner, K.Barnes, M.A. Thoreson, See page 441. P.Z. Anastasiadis, L. Matrisian, L.M. Bundy, L. Sealy, B. Gilbert, F. van Roy, and A.B. Reynolds Hsc70 is required for endocytosis and clathrin function in Drosophila H.C. Chang, S.L. Newmyer, M.J. Hull, M. Ebersold, S.L. Schmid, and 1. Mellman cGMP-mediated signaling via cGKIa is required for the guidance and connectivity of sensory axons H. Schmidt, M. Werner, P.A. Heppenstall, M. Henning, M.I. More, S. Kiihbandner, G.R. Lewin, F. Hofmann, R. Feil, and F.G. Rathjen Fly telomeres consist of HeT-A and TART ret- rotransposons. The HeT-A Gag protein as¬ sociates with fly telo¬ meres (top), but the TART Gag does not (bottom), unless the HeT-A Gag is also present. See page 397. 11 TThe^ Jo.u rnal of ^ | IV-A^UL Biolog^ Volume 159 No. 4 \ November 25, 2002 - News - Research Articles - ■M In This Issue • Suicide attempt linked to breakdown The Xenopus Xmusi 01 protein is • CLIPS to the rescue required for the recruitment of Cdc45 to origins of DNA replication • ER takes a faster track • Selecting synapse start sites R. A. Van Hatten, A.V. Tutter, A.H. Holway, A.M. Khederian, J.C. Walter, and W.M. Michael • A chaperone in motoneuron disease A.W. Dove hNuf2 inhibition blocks stable kinetochore-microtubule attachment Research Roundup On the Cover and induces mitotic cell death • Viva the worm Synaptic machinery is in HeLa cells delivered in TGN or¬ • Polyamino acids take amyloid form ganelles (green), which J.G. DeLuca, B. Moree, J.M. Hickey, • Poking a hole in mitochondria are linked via spectrin J.V. Kilmartin, and E.D. Salmon to clusters of NCAM • Putting a cap on reinitiation (red). These clusters translocate along neu- K-loop insertion restores microtubule • Dendritic cells can be self sustaining rites and are trapped at depolymerizing activity of a sites of initial neurite- N. LeBrasseur to-neurite contact. See "neckless" MCAK mutant page 649. Y. Ovechkina, M. Wagenbach, and L. Wordeman Missense mutation in the tubulin- specific chaperone E {Tbce) gene in the mouse mutant progressive motor neuronopathy, a model of human motoneuron disease H. Bommel, G. Xie, W. Rossoll, S. Wiese, S. Jablonka, T. Boehm, and M. Sendtner Activation of myosin V-based motility and F-actin-dependent network formation of endoplasmic reticulum during mitosis T. Wollert, D.G. Weiss, H.-H. Gerdes, and S.A. Kuznetsov REFI/Aly and the additional exon junction complex proteins are dispensable for nuclear mRNA export Articles with related stories in D. Ciatfield and E. Iz^urralde the In This Issue section have page numbers in red. Clustering of neuronal potassium 663 Articles (cont.) channels is independent of their Cytoplasmic linker proteins promote 589 interaction with PSD-95 microtubule rescue in vivo M.N. Rasband, E.W. Park, D. Zhen, Y.A. Komarova, A.S. Akhmanova, S.-i. Kojima, M.I. Arbuckle, S. Poliak, E. Peles, N. Galjart, and G.G. Borisy S.G.N. Grant, and J.S. Trimmer Iqgl p links spatial and secretion 601 Localized suppression of RhoA activity 673 landmarks to polarity and cytokinesis by Tyr31 /118-phosphorylated paxillin in cell adhesion and migration M.A. Osman, J.B. Konopka, and R.A. Cerione A. Tsubouchi, J. Sakakura, R. Yagi, Y. Mazaki, Recombinant expression of the 613 The tension exerted by a E. Schaefer, H. Yano, and FI. Sabe laser trap on a fibronec- voltage-dependent anion channel tion-coated bead causes enhances the transfer of Ca^^ the accumulation of Uroplakin lllb, a urothelial 685 microdomains to mitochondria GFP-vinculin (pseudo¬ differentiation marker, dimerizes colored) around the with uroplakin lb as an early step E. Rapizzi, P. Pinton, G. Szabadkai, bead. See page 695. M.R. Wieckowski, G. Vandecasteele, G. Baird, of urothelial plaque assembly R.A. Tuft, K.E. Fogarty, and R. Rizzuto F. -M. Deng, F.-X. Liang, L. Tu, K.A. Rcsing, P. Fiu, M. Supino, C.-C.A. Hu, G. Zhou, Membrane proximal lysosomes 625 M. Ding, G. Kreibich, and T.-T. Sun are the major vesicles responsible for calcium-dependent exocytosis The relationship between force 695 in nonsecretory cells and focal complex development J.K. jaiswal, N.W. Andrews, and S.M. Simon C.G. Galbraith, K.M. Yamada, and M.P. Sheet?. A caspase cleavage fragment of pi 15 637 Additions and corrections 707 induces fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus and apoptosis R. Chiu, L. Novikov, S. Mukherjee, and D. Shields Neural cell adhesion molecule ^4^ VDAC allows the fast diffusion of calcium promotes accumulation from ER release sites to of TGN organelles at sites the inner mitochondrial of neuron-to-neuron contacts membrane at regions where mitochondria V. Sytnyk, I. Leshchyns’ka, M. Deiling, (blue) overlap with ER G. Dityateva, A. Dityatev, and M. Schachner (red). See page 613.

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.