Morning Overview on MSN
Immune cells ripping DNA from dying nuclei in wild nucleocytosis process
Researchers in Japan have identified a striking new way immune cells strip DNA out of dying neighbors, a process they call ...
A team of Yale researchers discovered how a protein called Ndc1 coordinates nuclear pore and envelope assembly after cell division, an important component of understanding how cell nuclei change in ...
Within a cell, the nucleus is surrounded by the nuclear envelope—two layers of phospholipid membrane that prevents the nucleus mixing with other parts of the cell, thus protecting the cell's DNA from ...
A new study published in the journal Developmental Cell has revealed how a cell nucleus can repair itself when ruptured to prevent DNA spilling out into the rest of the cell. A cell's nucleus has a ...
Expansion microscopy reveals the structure of huntingtin aggregates inside the cell nucleus. Huntington’s disease is a devastating neurogenerative disorder caused by a mutation in the HTT gene that ...
Every time a cell divides, the protective envelope that surrounds the nucleus is broken down and rebuilt into two new ones. Envelopes are highly complex structures of membranes and proteins which must ...
Scientists at the Utrecht University in the Netherlands say they have identified a new way in which the toxic protein aggregates associated with Huntington’s disease may damage nerve cells and cause ...
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