Latest News from: Stowers Institute for Medical Research

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6-Jun-2012 7:00 AM EDT
Pinched Off
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

An actin-ratchet tightens the contractile ring that severs budding daughter cells from their yeast mothers.

26-Apr-2012 1:25 PM EDT
Control of Gene Expression: Histone Occupancy in Your Genome
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

A team of Stowers scientists defines biochemical crosstalk between DNA interacting proteins and their modifications.

Released: 30-Apr-2012 3:00 PM EDT
Jarid2 May Break the Polycomb Silence
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Stowers scientists use fruit flies to reveal unknown function of a transcriptional regulator of development and cancer

3-Apr-2012 4:05 PM EDT
On the Move
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Cells on the move reach forward with lamellipodia and filopodia, cytoplasmic sheets and rods supported by branched networks or tight bundles of actin filaments. Cells without functional lamellipodia are still highly motile but lose their ability to stay on track, report researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in the April 9, 2012, online issue of the Journal of Cell Biology.

21-Mar-2012 10:15 AM EDT
A Double Ring Ceremony Prepares Telomerase RNA to Wed Its Protein Partner
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Few molecules are more interesting than DNA—except of course RNA. After two decades of research, that “other macromolecule” is no longer considered a mere messenger between glamorous DNA and protein-synthesizing machines. We now know that RNA has been leading a secret life, regulating gene expression and partnering with proteins to form catalytic ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes.

Released: 19-Mar-2012 9:00 AM EDT
Smell Is a Symphony
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Just like a road atlas faithfully maps real-word locations, our brain maps many aspects of our physical world: Sensory inputs from our fingers are mapped next to each other in the somatosensory cortex; the auditory system is organized by sound frequency. The olfactory system was believed to map similarly, where groups of chemically related odorants - amines, ketones, or esters, for example - register with clusters of cells that are laid out next to each other.

15-Feb-2012 7:00 AM EST
A Surprising Molecular SwitchLipids Help Control the Development of Cell Polarity.
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

In a standard biology textbook, cells tend to look more or less the same from all sides. But in real life cells have fronts and backs, tops and bottoms, and they orient many of their structures according to this polarity explaining, for example, why yeast cells bud at one end and not the other.

25-Jan-2012 12:00 PM EST
That Which Does Not Kill Yeast Makes It Stronger
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Stress-induced genomic instability facilitates rapid cellular adaption in yeast.

Released: 27-Jan-2012 3:00 PM EST
Making Memories Last
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Stowers researchers discovered that a prion-like protein plays a key role in storing long-term memories.

3-Jan-2012 5:00 PM EST
Flatworms’ Minimalist Approach to Cell Division Reveals the Molecular Architecture of the Human Centrosome
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Researchers at the University of California, San Francisco and the Stowers Institute for Medical Research have discovered that planarians, tiny flatworms fabled for their regenerative powers, completely lack centrosomes, cellular structures that organize the network of microtubules that pulls chromosomes apart during cell division.

20-Dec-2011 7:00 AM EST
For Every Road There Is a Tire
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Transcriptional elongation control takes on new dimensions as Stowers researchers find gene class-specific elongation factors.

30-Nov-2011 11:55 AM EST
Lessons Learned from Yeast About Human Leukemia: the Power of Basic Model Organisms in Human Health
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

The trifecta of biological proof is to take a discovery made in a simple model organism like baker’s yeast and track down its analogs or homologs in “higher” creatures right up the complexity scale to people, in this case, from yeast to fruit flies to humans. In a pair of related studies, scientists at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research have hit such a trifecta, closing a circle of inquiry that they opened over a decade ago.

18-Nov-2011 9:05 AM EST
How Old Yeast Cells Send Off Their Daughter Cells without the Baggage of Old Age
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

The accumulation of damaged protein is a hallmark of aging that not even the humble baker’s yeast can escape. Yet, aged yeast cells spawn off youthful daughter cells without any of the telltale protein clumps. Now, researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research may have found an explanation for the observed asymmetrical distribution of damaged proteins between mothers and their youthful daughters.

17-Nov-2011 1:40 PM EST
One for You, One for Me: Researchers Gain New Insight Into the Chromosome Separation Process
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Each time a cell divides—and it takes millions of cell divisions to create a fully grown human body from a single fertilized cell—its chromosomes have to be accurately divvied up between both daughter cells. Researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research used, ironically enough, the single-celled organism Saccharomyces cerevisiae—commonly known as baker’s yeast—to gain new insight into the process by which chromosomes are physically segregated during cell division.

Released: 1-Nov-2011 12:50 PM EDT
Pairing Up: How Chromosomes Find Each Other
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

After more than a century of study, mysteries still remain about the process of meiosis—a special type of cell division that helps insure genetic diversity in sexually-reproducing organisms. Now, researchers at Stowers Institute for Medical Research shed light on an early and critical step in meiosis.

Released: 6-Sep-2011 11:00 AM EDT
Stowers Scientists Successfully Expand Bone Marrow-Derived Stem Cells in Culture
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

All stem cells—regardless of their source—share the remarkable capability to replenish themselves by undergoing self-renewal. Yet, so far, efforts to grow and expand scarce hematopoietic (or blood-forming) stem cells in culture for therapeutic applications have been met with limited success.

25-Aug-2011 5:00 PM EDT
Going with the Flow
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Most cells rely on structural tethers to position chromosomes in preparation for cell division. Not so oocytes. Instead, a powerful intracellular stream pushes chromosomes far-off the center in preparation for the highly asymmetric cell division that completes oocyte maturation upon fertilization of the egg, report researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research.

Released: 9-Aug-2011 2:00 PM EDT
From Worm to Man: Flatworms Provide New Insight Into Organ Regeneration and the Evolution of Mammalian Kidneys
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Our bodies are perfectly capable of renewing billions of cells every day but fail miserably when it comes to replacing damaged organs such as kidneys. Using the flatworm Schmidtea mediterranea—famous for its capacity to regrow complete animals from minuscule flecks of tissue—as an eloquent example, researchers at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research demonstrated how our distant evolutionary cousins regenerate their excretory systems from scratch.

13-Jul-2011 4:20 PM EDT
Ready, Go!
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Stowers researchers pinpoint the Super Elongation Complex as a major regulator in the coordinated expression of early developmental genes.

14-Jul-2011 11:00 AM EDT
The Unfolding SAGA of Transcriptional Co-Activators
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Successful gene expression requires the concerted action of a host of regulatory factors. Long overshadowed by bonafide transcription factors, coactivators—the hanger-ons that facilitate transcription by docking onto transcription factors or modifying chromatin—have recently come to the fore.

5-Jul-2011 11:00 AM EDT
Control of Gene Expression: Mediator MED26 Shifts an Idling Polymerase Into High Gear
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

A report from the Conaway lab at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in the July 8, 2011, edition of the journal Cell identifies a switch that allows RNA polymerase to shift gears from neutral into drive and start transcribing. This work sheds light on a process fundamental to all plant or animal cells and suggests how transcriptional anomalies could give rise to tumors.

Released: 20-Jun-2011 4:30 PM EDT
Stowers Institute Recruits Top Scientists in Developmental and Regenerative Biology
Stowers Institute for Medical Research

Renowned developmental biologist Tatjana Piotrowski, Ph.D., and trailblazing regeneration expert Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado, Ph.D., joined the Stowers Institute for Medical Research, the Institute announced today.


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