MICROSCOPIC TECHNIQUES HYPERLINK to PAPER OR ABSTRACT TITLE ABSTRACT Journal Volume ISSUE MTH YEAR CELL LINE MAIN AUTHOR CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS KEYWORDS MATERIALS & METHODS
Spnning Disc Confocal 932 Dynamic Fgf signaling couples morphogenesis and migration in the zebrafish lateral line primordium The collective migration of cells in the form of cohesive tissues is a hallmark of both morphogenesis and repair. The extrinsic cues that direct these complex migrations usually act by regulating the dynamics of a specific subset of cells, those at the le Development 135 16 July 2008   Lecaudey, Virginie Virginie Lecaudey, Gulcin Cakan-Akdogan, William H. J. Norton and Darren Gilmour Lateral line primordium, Zebrafish, Collective migration, Fgf, Rosette morphogenesis  
Spnning Disc Confocal 944 Mob4 plays a role in spindle focusing in Drosophila S2 cells The characteristic bipolar shape of the mitotic spindle is produced by the focusing of the minus ends of microtubules at the spindle poles. The focus is maintained by the centrosome, a microtubule-nucleating organelle, as well as by proteins that are capa Journal of Cell Science 121 8 April 2008   Trammell, Matthew A. Matthew A. Trammell, Nicole M. Mahoney, David A. Agard and Ronald D. Vale RNAi, Centrosome, Microtubule, Kinetochore, y-tubulin  
Spnning Disc Confocal 898 Whole genome functional analysis identifies novel components
required for mitotic spindle integrity in human cells
Background: The mitotic spindle is a complex mechanical apparatus required for accurate
segregation of sister chromosomes during mitosis. We designed a genetic screen using automated
microscopy to discover factors essential for mitotic progression. Usin
Genome Biology 9 2 February 2008 HeLa and U2OS Daniel R Rines Daniel R Rines, Maria Ana Gomez-Ferreria, Yingyao Zhou, Paul DeJesus, Seanna Grob, Serge Batalov, Marc Labow, Dieter Huesken, Craig Mickanin, Jonathan Hall, Mischa Reinhardt, Francois Natt, Joerg Lange, David J Sharp, Sumit Chanda, Jeremy S Caldwell   In brief, 80 nmol of the siRNA was diluted
in 500 μl of OptiMem (Invitrogen) and placed in a 35 mm
glass bottom dish (MatTek Corporation, Ashland, MA).
Spnning Disc Confocal 930 EGF-induced Enhancement of Glioblastoma Cell Migration in 3D Arises from Intrinsic Increase in Speed but Extrinsic Matrix- and Proteolysis-dependent Increase in Persistence Epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor-mediated cell migration plays a vital role in invasion of many tumor types. EGF receptor ligands increase invasiveness in vivo, but it remains unclear how consequent effects on intrinsic cell motility behavior versus Molecular Biology of the Cell     July 2008   Kim, Hyung-Do Hyung-Do Kim, Tiffany W. Guo, Angela P. Wu, Alan Wells, Frank B. Gertler, Douglas A. Lauffenburger EGF, gliobastoma, cell motility, migration