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    <dc:date>2013-05-21T04:55:34Z</dc:date>
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    <title>Spatiotemporal mechanisms for actomyosin ring assembly and contraction in budding yeast cell division</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/10362/8571</link>
    <description>Title: Spatiotemporal mechanisms for actomyosin ring assembly and contraction in budding yeast cell division
Authors: Mendes Pinto, Inês
Abstract: Animal and yeast cells use a contractile ring that is&#xD;
attached to the plasma membrane to create a cleavage furrow&#xD;
that partitions a cell into two in the latest step of cell division. The&#xD;
contractile ring is a network of actin and myosin-II motor&#xD;
filaments embedded in a complex and compact protein core&#xD;
structure at the cell division site. In the absence of myosin-II,&#xD;
cells fail to assemble the contractile ring pursuing death or rapidly&#xD;
evolving divergent pathways to restore growth and cytokinesis,&#xD;
an event associated to aneuploidy, a common trait in cancer&#xD;
development and progression. The molecular mechanisms&#xD;
underlying myosin-II localization and function at the cell division&#xD;
site with actin ring assembly and contraction remain poorly&#xD;
understood. Based on analogy to the striated muscle, it has been&#xD;
classically proposed that contractile stress in the actomyosin ring&#xD;
is generated via a “sliding filament” mechanism in which bipolar&#xD;
myosin-II motor filaments walk along actin filaments, within&#xD;
organized sarcomere-like arrays. However, ultra-structural and&#xD;
genetic studies in different cellular systems have shown that&#xD;
contractile rings are more complex than striated muscles, and in&#xD;
some examples the motor activity can actually be dispensable for&#xD;
the contractibility of the cytokinetic ring.(...)
Description: Dissertation presented to obtain the Ph.D degree in Molecular Medicine</description>
    <dc:date>2012-03-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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