Evolutionary cell biology of the nucleus
We are a brand new research group in the Cell Biology and Biophysics Unit at EMBL Heidelberg investigating the evolution of nuclear architecture and remodelling.
Our interests are diverse and span several additional areas of cell biology, including membrane remodelling, the cell cycle, archaeal cell biology, microscopy, and experimental evolution. Posts by Gautam, lab members and collaborators!
Delineating the rules for structural adaptation of membrane-associated proteins to evolutionary changes in membrane lipidome
Selected by
Dey Lab
Isolation of an archaeon at the prokaryote-eukaryote interface
Selected by
Dey Lab
Co-reviewing and ghostwriting by early career researchers in the peer review of manuscripts
Selected by
Dey Lab, Tessa Sinnige
Mitotic exit is controlled during anaphase by an Aurora B-Cyclin B1/Cdk1 crosstalk
Selected by
Dey Lab
Tracking the popularity and outcomes of all bioRxiv preprints
Selected by
Dey Lab et al.
Bridging the divide: bacteria synthesizing archaeal membrane lipids
AND
Extensive transfer of membrane lipid biosynthetic genes between Archaea and Bacteria
Selected by
Dey Lab
Revealing the nanoscale morphology of the primary cilium using super-resolution fluorescence microscopy
Selected by
Dey Lab
Budding yeast complete DNA replication after chromosome segregation begins
Selected by
Dey Lab, Maiko Kitaoka
Conserved phosphorylation hotspots in eukaryotic protein domain families
Selected by
Dey Lab
Moving beyond P values: Everyday data analysis with estimation plots
Selected by
Dey Lab
ER-to-Golgi trafficking of procollagen in the absence of large carriers.
Selected by
Dey Lab
Live-cell imaging of marked chromosome regions reveals dynamics of mitotic chromosome resolution and compaction
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Quantitative imaging of chromatin decompaction in living cells
Selected by
Carmen Adriaens, Dey Lab