1979
DOI: 10.1016/s0022-5320(79)90165-5
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Structural relationship between the nucleolus and the nuclear envelope

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Cited by 76 publications
(43 citation statements)
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“…6B, bottom image). In human cells it has long been reported that there are connections between the nuclear envelope and the nucleolus (Bourgeois et al 1979); here, however, we found no evidence of such contacts. This observation is more apparent in cells in which the lamina was marked by immunostaining and the nucleolus with S9-GFP: There is no evidence by confocal microscopy of either a contact with the nucleolus or nuclear envelope invaginations (see Supplemental Fig.…”
Section: Development Of Transgenic Drosophila Which Allows Visualizatcontrasting
confidence: 93%
“…6B, bottom image). In human cells it has long been reported that there are connections between the nuclear envelope and the nucleolus (Bourgeois et al 1979); here, however, we found no evidence of such contacts. This observation is more apparent in cells in which the lamina was marked by immunostaining and the nucleolus with S9-GFP: There is no evidence by confocal microscopy of either a contact with the nucleolus or nuclear envelope invaginations (see Supplemental Fig.…”
Section: Development Of Transgenic Drosophila Which Allows Visualizatcontrasting
confidence: 93%
“…The nuclear foci of BRCA1 protein are widely distributed within the nucleoplasm, but they are excluded from nucleoli. The termination of a subset of invaginations of the nuclear envelope adjacent to nucleoli (Bourgeois et al, 1979;Fricker et al, 1997) together with exclusion of BRCA1 foci from within nucleoli may account for a previous interpretation that BRCA1 foci associated with invaginations of the nuclear envelope (Coene et al, 1997). However, at the ultrastructural level, it is clear that the BRCA1 foci do not show obvious association with the nuclear envelope, either at the nuclear margin or on the walls of nuclear invaginations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Such approaches allow the identification of dynamic tubular channels which appear as deep, narrow invaginations of the nuclear envelope. These invaginations, or infoldings, first described in 1979 (Bourgeois, et al, 1979), have been observed in a lot of cell types (Clubb and Locke, 1998, Collado-Hilly, et al, 2010, Fricker, et al, 1997, Johnson, et al, 2003, Langevin, et al, 2010, Lui, et al, 2003, Wittmann, et al, 2009. The invaginations of the NE have been recently classified into two main classes depending on whether the ONM is involved (Malhas, et al, 2011).…”
Section: Structure Of the Nuclear Envelopementioning
confidence: 99%