Centrosome aberrations: cause or consequence of cancer progression? (original) (raw)
Bornens, M. Centrosome composition and microtubule anchoring mechanisms. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol.14, 25–34 (2002). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Doxsey, S. Re-evaluating centrosome function. Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Biol.2, 688–698 (2001). ArticleCAS Google Scholar
Lange, B. M. H. Integration of the centrosome in cell cycle control, stress response and signal transduction pathways. Curr. Opin. Cell Biol.14, 35–43 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Hinchcliffe, E. H. & Sluder, G. 'It takes two to tango': understanding how centrosome duplication is regulated throughout the cell cycle. Genes Dev.15, 1167–1181 (2001). ArticleCASPubMed Google Scholar
Meraldi, P. & Nigg, E. A. The centrosome cycle. FEBS Lett.521, 9–13 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Hinchcliffe, E. H., Miller, F. J., Cham, M., Khodjakov, A. & Sluder, G. Requirement of a centrosomal activity for cell cycle progression through G1 into S phase. Science291, 1547–1550 (2001).Cell microsurgery is used to study the role of the centrosome during cell-cycle progression. This provocative study points to a crucial centrosome-related function at the G1–S transition. CASPubMed Google Scholar
Pines, J. Four-dimensional control of the cell cycle. Nature Cell Biol.1, E73–E79 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Rieder, C. L., Faruki, S. & Khodjakov,A. The centrosome in vertebrates: more than a microtubule-organizing center. Trends Cell Biol.11, 413–419 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Sibon, O. C., Kelkar, A., Lemstra, W. & Theurkauf, W. E. DNA-replication/DNA-damage-dependent centrosome inactivation in Drosophila embryos. Nature Cell Biol.2, 90–95 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Boveri, Th. Zur Frage der Entstehung maligner Tumoren, 1914 (English Translation: The Origin of Malignant Tumors, Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore, Maryland, 1929).A summary of the pioneering experiments that provide the foundations for our current thinking about the role of the centrosome in tumorigenesis. A lucid and prophetic treatise. Google Scholar
Lingle, W. L., Lutz, W. H., Ingle, J. N., Maihle, N. J. & Salisbury, J. L. Centrosome hypertrophy in human breast tumors: implications for genomic stability and cell polarity. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA95, 2950–2955 (1998). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Pihan, G. A. et al. Centrosome defects and genetic instability in malignant tumors. Cancer Res.58, 3974–3985 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Weber, R. G. et al. Centrosome amplification as a possible mechanism for numerical chromosome aberrations in cerebral primitive neuroectodermal tumors with TP53 mutations. Cytogenet. Cell Genet.83, 266–269 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Zheng, Y., Wong, M. L., Alberts, B. & Mitchison, T. Nucleation of microtubule assembly by a γ-tubulin-containing ring complex. Nature378, 578–583 (1995). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Simerly, C. et al. The paternal inheritance of the centrosome, the cell's microtubule-organizing center, in humans, and the implications for infertility. Nature Med.1, 47–52 (1995). PubMed Google Scholar
Freed, E. et al. Components of an SCF ubiquitin ligase localize to the centrosome and regulate the centrosome duplication cycle. Genes Dev.13, 2242–2257 (1999). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Wojcik, E. J., Glover, D. M. & Hays, T. S. The SCF ubiquitin ligase protein slimb regulates centrosome duplication in Drosophila. Curr. Biol.10, 1131–1134 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Sluder, G. & Hinchcliffe, E. H. The coordination of centrosome reproduction with nuclear events during the cell cycle. Curr. Top. Dev. Biol.49, 267–289 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Meraldi, P., Lukas, J., Fry, A. M., Bartek, J. & Nigg, E. A. Centrosome duplication in mammalian somatic cells requires E2F and Cdk2-cyclin A. Nature Cell Biol.1, 88–93 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Hinchcliffe, E. H., Li, C., Thompson, E. A., Maller, J. L. & Sluder, G. Requirement of Cdk2–cyclin E activity for repeated centrosome reproduction in Xenopus egg extracts. Science283, 851–854 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Lacey, K. R., Jackson, P. K. & Stearns, T. Cyclin-dependent kinase control of centrosome duplication. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA96, 2817–2822 (1999). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Matsumoto, Y., Hayashi, K. & Nishida, E. Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (Cdk2) is required for centrosome duplication in mammalian cells. Curr. Biol.9, 429–432 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Pihan, G. A. et al. Centrosome defects can account for cellular and genetic changes that characterize prostate cancer progression. Cancer Res.61, 2212–2219 (2001).A very careful study on the relationship between centrosome anomalies and prostate tumours at various stages of progression. CASPubMed Google Scholar
Lingle, W. L. & Salisbury, J. L. Altered centrosome structure is associated with abnormal mitoses in human breast tumors. Am. J. Pathol.155, 1941–1951 (1999).Detailed ultrastructural analysis of centrosomes in human breast tumours, revealing a strong association between the excess of pericentriolar material and abnormal mitoses. CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Sato, N. et al. Centrosome abnormalities in pancreatic ductal carcinoma. Clin. Cancer Res.5, 963–970 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Sato, N. et al. Correlation between centrosome abnormalities and chromosomal instability in human pancreatic cancer cells. Cancer Genet. Cytogenet.126, 13–19 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Kuo, K. K. et al. Centrosome abnormalities in human carcinomas of the gallbladder and intrahepatic and extrahepatic bile ducts. Hepatology31, 59–64 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Gustafson, L. M. et al. Centrosome hyperamplification in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma: a potential phenotypic marker of tumor aggressiveness. Laryngoscope110, 1798–1801 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Carroll, P. E. et al. Centrosome hyperamplification in human cancer: chromosome instability induced by p53 mutation and/or Mdm2 overexpression. Oncogene18, 1935–1944 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Duensing, S. & Munger, K. Centrosome abnormalities, genomic instability and carcinogenic progression. Biochim. Biophys. Acta1471, M81–M88 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Duensing, S. & Muenger, K. Human papillomaviruses and centrosome dupliation errors: modeling the origins of genomic instability. Oncogene21, 6241–6248 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Skyldberg, B. et al. Human papillomavirus infection, centrosome aberration, and genetic stability in cervical lesions. Mod. Pathol.14, 279–284 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Ghadimi, B. M. et al. Centrosome amplification and instability occurs exclusively in aneuploid, but not in diploid colorectal cancer cell lines, and correlates with numerical chromosomal aberrations. Genes Chromosom. Cancer27, 183–190 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Lingle, W. L. et al. Centrosome amplification drives chromosomal instability in breast tumor development. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA99, 1978–1983 (2002). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Pihan, G. A., Wallace, J., Zhou, Y. & Doxsey, S. Centrosome abnormalities and chromosome instability occur together in precancerous lesions. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA (in the press).
Gergely, F. et al. The TACC domain identifies a family of centrosomal proteins that can interact with microtubules. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA97, 14352–14357 (2000). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Mayor, T., Hacker, U., Stierhof, Y. D. & Nigg, E. A. The mechanism regulating the dissociation of the centrosomal protein C-Nap1 from mitotic spindle poles. J. Cell Sci.115, 3275–3248 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Ohta, T. et al. Characterization of Cep135, a novel coiled-coil centrosomal protein involved in microtubule organization in mammalian cells. J. Cell Biol.156, 87–100 (2002). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Purohit, A., Tynan, S. H., Vallee, R. & Doxsey, S. J. Direct interaction of pericentrin with cytoplasmic dynein light intermediate chain contributes to mitotic spindle organization. J. Cell Biol.147, 481–492 (1999). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Mitelman, F. Recurrent chromosome aberrations in cancer. Mutat. Res.462, 247–253 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Ried, T., Heselmeyer-Haddad, K., Blegen, H., Schrock, E. & Auer, G. Genomic changes defining the genesis, progression, and malignancy potential in solid human tumors: a phenotype/genotype correlation. Genes Chromosom. Cancer25, 195–204 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Duensing, S. et al. Centrosome abnormalities and genomic instability by episomal expression of human papillomavirus type 16 in raft cultures of human keratinocytes. J. Virol.75, 7712–7716 (2001). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Duensing, S., Duensing, A., Crum, C. P. & Munger, K. Human papillomavirus type 16 E7 oncoprotein-induced abnormal centrosome synthesis is an early event in the evolving malignant phenotype. Cancer Res.61, 2356–2360 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Goepfert, T. M. et al. Centrosome amplification and overexpression of Aurora-A are early events in rat mammary carcinogenesis. Cancer Res.62, 4115–4122 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Shono, M. et al. Stepwise progression of centrosome defects associated with local tumor growth and metastatic process of human pancreatic carcinoma cells transplanted orthotopically into nude mice. Lab. Invest.81, 945–952 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Brinkley, B. R. Managing the centrosome numbers game: from chaos to stability in cancer cell division. Trends Cell Biol.11, 18–21 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Balczon, R. et al. Dissociation of centrosome replication events from cycles of DNA synthesis and mitotic division in hydroxyurea-arrested Chinese hamster ovary cells. J. Cell Biol.130, 105–115 (1995). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Meraldi, P., Honda, R. & Nigg, E. A. Aurora-A overexpression reveals tetraploidization as a major route to centrosome amplification in p53−/− cells. EMBO J.21, 483–492 (2002).Overexpression of Aurora-A and other mitotic kinases is shown to cause centrosome amplification, not by deregulating centrosome duplication as previously thought but, instead, through defects in cytokinesis that result in transiently tetraploid cells. This phenotype is enhanced in p53−/−cells. CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Balczon, R. C. Overexpression of cyclin A in human HeLa cells induces detachment of kinetochores and spindle pole/centrosome overproduction. Chromosoma110, 381–392 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Millband, D. N., Campbell, L. & Hardwick, K. G. The awesome power of multiple model systems: interpreting the complex nature of spindle checkpoint signaling. Trends Cell Biol.12, 205–209 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Shekhar, M. P., Lyakhovich, A., Visscher, D. W., Heng, H. & Kondrat, N. Rad6 overexpression induces multinucleation, centrosome amplification, abnormal mitosis, aneuploidy, and transformation. Cancer Res.62, 2115–2124 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Galipeau, P. C. et al. 17p (p53) allelic losses, 4N (G2/tetraploid) populations, and progression to aneuploidy in Barrett's esophagus. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA93, 7081–7084 (1996). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Shackney, S. E. et al. Model for the genetic evolution of human solid tumors. Cancer Res.49, 3344–3354 (1989). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Southern, S. A., Evans, M. F. & Herrington, C. S. Basal cell tetrasomy in low-grade cervical squamous intraepithelial lesions infected with high-risk human papillomaviruses. Cancer Res.57, 4210–4213 (1997). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Fukasawa, K., Choi, T., Kuriyama, R., Rulong, S. & Vande Woude, G. F. Abnormal centrosome amplification in the absence of p53. Science271, 1744–1747 (1996).An influential study that contributed greatly to the revival of interest in the possible contribution of centrosome aberrations to carcinogenesis. CASPubMed Google Scholar
Levine, D. S., Sanchez, C. A., Rabinovitch, P. S. & Reid, B. J. Formation of the tetraploid intermediate is associated with the development of cells with more than four centrioles in the elastase-simian virus 40 tumor antigen transgenic mouse model of pancreatic cancer. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA88, 6427–6431 (1991). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Tarapore, P., Horn, H. F., Tokuyama, Y. & Fukasawa, K. Direct regulation of the centrosome duplication cycle by the p53-p21Waf1/Cip1 pathway. Oncogene20, 3173–3184 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Andreassen, P. R., Lohez, O. D., Lacroix, F. B. & Margolis, R. L. Tetraploid state induces p53-dependent arrest of nontransformed mammalian cells in G1. Mol. Biol. Cell12, 1315–1328 (2001). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Borel, F., Lohez, O. D., Lacroix, F. B. & Margolis, R. L. Multiple centrosomes arise from tetraploidy checkpoint failure and mitotic centrosome clusters in p53 and RB pocket protein-compromised cells. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA.99, 9819–9824 (2002). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Casenghi, M. et al. p53-independent apoptosis and p53-dependent block of DNA rereplication following mitotic spindle inhibition in human cells. Exp. Cell Res.250, 339–350 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Khan, S. H. & Wahl, G. M. p53 and pRb prevent rereplication in response to microtubule inhibitors by mediating a reversible G1 arrest. Cancer Res.58, 396–401 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Lanni, J. S. & Jacks, T. Characterization of the p53-dependent postmitotic checkpoint following spindle disruption. Mol. Cell. Biol.18, 1055–1064 (1998). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Minn, A. J., Boise, L. H. & Thompson, C. B. Expression of Bcl-xL and loss of p53 can cooperate to overcome a cell cycle checkpoint induced by mitotic spindle damage. Genes Dev.10, 2621–2631 (1996). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Goepfert, T. M. et al. Progesterone facilitates chromosome instability (aneuploidy) in p53 null normal mammary epithelial cells. FASEB J.14, 2221–2229 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Bunz, F. et al. Targeted inactivation of p53 in human cells does not result in aneuploidy. Cancer Res.62, 1129–1133 (2002). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Duensing, S. et al. The human papillomavirus type 16 E6 and E7 oncoproteins cooperate to induce mitotic defects and genomic instability by uncoupling centrosome duplication from the cell division cycle. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA97, 10002–10007 (2000). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Duensing, S., Duensing, A., Crum, C. P. & Munger, K. Human papillomavirus type 16 E7 oncoprotein-induced abnormal centrosome synthesis is an early event in the evolving malignant phenotype. Cancer Res.61, 2356–2360 (2001).An interesting studying indicating that the two oncoproteins that are encoded by HPV-16 induce numerical centrosome aberrations by distinct mechanisms. CASPubMed Google Scholar
Haruki, N. et al. Persistent increase in chromosome instability in lung cancer: possible indirect involvement of p53 inactivation. Am. J. Pathol.159, 1345–1352 (2001). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Lingle, W. L. & Salisbury, J. L. The role of the centrosome in the development of malignant tumors. Curr. Top. Dev. Biol.49, 313–329 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Pihan, G. A. & Doxsey, S. J. The mitotic machinery as a source of genetic instability in cancer. Semin. Cancer Biol.9, 289–302 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Griffin, C. S., Simpson, P. J., Wilson, C. R. & Thacker, J. Mammalian recombination-repair genes XRCC2 and XRCC3 promote correct chromosome segregation. Nature Cell Biol.2, 757–761 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Knoblich, J. A. Asymmetric cell division during animal development. Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Biol.2, 11–20 (2001). CAS Google Scholar
Meads, T. & Schroer, T. A. Polarity and nucleation of microtubules in polarized epithelial cells. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton32, 273–288 (1995). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Reinsch, S. & Karsenti, E. Orientation of spindle axis and distribution of plasma membrane proteins during cell division in polarized MDCKII cells. J. Cell Biol.126, 1509–1526 (1994). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Karsenti, E. & Vernos, I. The mitotic spindle: a self-made machine. Science294, 543–547 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Khodjakov, A. & Rieder, C. L. Centrosomes enhance the fidelity of cytokinesis in vertebrates and are required for cell cycle progression. J. Cell Biol.153, 237–242 (2001).This fascinating study examines — using laser microsurgery — the role of centrosomes during vertebrate cell-cycle progression. Following ablation of centrosomes, cells can still form bipolar mitotic spindles, but they frequently fail cytokinesis and they cannot reinitiate DNA synthesis. CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Brinkley, B. R. et al. Tubulin assembly sites and the organization of cytoplasmic microtubules in cultured mammalian cells. J. Cell Biol.90, 554–562 (1981). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Ring, D., Hubble, R. & Kirschner, M. Mitosis in a cell with multiple centrioles. J. Cell Biol.94, 549–556 (1982). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Sharp, G. A., Weber, K. & Osborn, M. Centriole number and process formation in established neuroblastoma cells and primary dorsal root ganglion neurones. Eur. J. Cell Biol.29, 97–103 (1982). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Jallepalli, P. V & Lengauer, C. Chromosome segregation and cancer: cutting through the mystery. Nature Rev. Cancer1, 109–117 (2001). CAS Google Scholar
Sato, N. et al. A possible role for centrosome overduplication in radiation-induced cell death. Oncogene19, 5281–5290 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Mantel, C. et al. p21(cip-1/waf-1) deficiency causes deformed nuclear architecture, centriole overduplication, polyploidy, and relaxed microtubule damage checkpoints in human hematopoietic cells. Blood93, 1390–1398 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Hollander, M. C. et al. Genomic instability in Gadd45a-deficient mice. Nature Genet.23, 176–184 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Smith, L. et al. Duplication of ATR inhibits MyoD, induces aneuploidy and eliminates radiation-induced G1 arrest. Nature Genet.19, 39–46 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Xu, X. et al. Centrosome amplification and a defective G2-M cell cycle checkpoint induce genetic instability in BRCA1 exon 11 isoform-deficient cells. Mol. Cell3, 389–395 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Tutt, A. et al. Absence of Brca2 causes genome instability by chromosome breakage and loss associated with centrosome amplification. Curr. Biol.9, 1107–1110 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Xie, W., Li, L. & Cohen, S. N. Cell cycle-dependent subcellular localization of the TSG101 protein and mitotic and nuclear abnormalities associated with TSG101 deficiency. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA95, 1595–1600 (1998). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Nakayama, K. et al. Targeted disruption of Skp2 results in accumulation of cyclin E and p27(Kip1), polyploidy and centrosome overduplication. EMBO J.19, 2069–2081 (2000). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Zhou, H. et al. Tumour amplified kinase STK15/BTAK induces centrosome amplification, aneuploidy and transformation. Nature Genet.20, 189–193 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Li, F. et al. Pleiotropic cell-division defects and apoptosis induced by interference with survivin function. Nature Cell Biol.1, 461–466 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Gray, J. W. & Collins, C. Genome changes and gene expression in human solid tumors. Carcinogenesis21, 443–452 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Lengauer, C., Kinzler, K. W. & Vogelstein, B. Genetic instabilities in human cancers. Nature396, 643–649 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Loeb, L. A. Mutator phenotype may be required for multistage carcinogenesis. Cancer Res.51, 3075–3079 (1991). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Duesberg, P. & Rasnick, D. Aneuploidy, the somatic mutation that makes cancer a species of its own. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton47, 81–107 (2000). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Tomlinson, I., Sasieni, P. & Bodmer, W. How many mutations in a cancer? Am. J. Pathol.160, 755–758 (2002). PubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Mitelman, F., Johansson, B. & Mertens, F. Catalog of Chromosome Aberrations in Cancer Vol. 2 (Wiley–Liss, New York, 1994). Google Scholar
Hartwell, L. H. & Kastan, M. B. Cell cycle control and cancer. Science266, 1821–1828 (1994). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Nigg, E. A. Mitotic kinases as regulators of cell division and its checkpoints. Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Biol.2, 21–32 (2001). CAS Google Scholar
Bornens, M., Paintrand, M., Berges, J., Marty, M. C. & Karsenti, E. Structural and chemical characterization of isolated centrosomes. Cell Motil. Cytoskeleton8, 238–249 (1987). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Paintrand, M., Moudjou, M., Delacroix, H. & Bornens, M. Centrosome organization and centriole architecture: their sensitivity to divalent cations. J. Struct. Biol.108, 107–128 (1992). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Beisson, J. & Jerka-Dziadosz, M. Polarities of the centriolar structure: morphogenetic consequences. Biol. Cell91, 367–378 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Fuchs, E. & Cleveland, D. W. A structural scaffolding of intermediate filaments in health and disease. Science279, 514–519 (1998). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Schliwa, M., Euteneuer, U., Graf, R. & Ueda, M. Centrosomes, microtubules and cell migration. Biochem. Soc. Symp.65, 223–231 (1999). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Piel, M., Nordberg, J., Euteneuer, U. & Bornens, M. Centrosome-dependent exit of cytokinesis in animal cells. Science291, 1550–1553 (2001).The careful examination of the behaviour of centrosomes in living mitotic cells revealed a remarkable repositioning of the older centriole to the midbody, indicating a crucial role for a centrosome-dependent pathway at the final stage of cell division. CASPubMed Google Scholar
Mayor, T., Stierhof, Y. D., Tanaka, K., Fry, A. M. & Nigg, E. A. The centrosomal protein C-Nap1 is required for cell cycle-regulated centrosome cohesion. J. Cell Biol.151, 837–846 (2000). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar
Kochanski, R. S. & Borisy, G. G. Mode of centriole duplication and distribution. J. Cell Biol.110, 1599–1605 (1990).A very elegant study, demonstrating that tubulin incorporation into centrioles during each cell cycle is conservative, whereas the distribution of centrioles is semi-conservative. CASPubMed Google Scholar
Hinchcliffe, E. H. & Sluder, G. Centrosome reproduction in Xenopus lysates. Methods Cell Biol.67, 269–287 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Piel, M. & Bornens, M. Centrosome reproduction in vitro: mammalian centrosomes in Xenopus lysates. Methods Cell Biol.67, 289–304 (2001). CASPubMed Google Scholar
Khodjakov, A. et al. De novo formation of centrosomes in vertebrate cells arrested during S phase. J. Cell Biol.158, 1171–1181 (2002). CASPubMedPubMed Central Google Scholar