Greenfield Sluder, Ph.D.
Academic Role: Professor
Faculty Appointment(s) In:
Cell Biology
Other Affiliation(s):
Cell Dynamics Group
Interdisciplinary Graduate Program
Recent Publications
Sluder G.. 2005.Two-way traffic: Centrosomes and the cell cycle. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2005 Sep;6(9):743-8.
Ehrhardt A. and Sluder G.. 2005. Spindle Pole Fragmentation Due to Proteasome Inhibition. J. Cell. Physiol. 2005 Sep;204(3):808-18.
La Terra S., English C.N., Hergert P., McEwen B.F., Sluder G., and A. Khodjakov. 2005. The de novo centriole assembly pathway in HeLa cells: cell cycle progression and centriole assembly/maturation. J. Cell Biol. 149:317-330.
Uetake Y. and G. Sluder 2005. Cell cycle progression after cleavage failure: Mammalian somatic cells do not possess a “tetraploidy checkpoint” J. Cell Biol. 165:609-15.
Murata-Hori M., Sluder G., and Wang Y.L.. 2004. Regulation of cell cycle by the anaphase spindle midzone. BMC Cell Biol. 5:49.
Sluder G. , Hinchcliffe E.H., and Rieder C.L. (2004). The progression and regulation of mitotic events. In G. Stein and A. Pardee (Eds.). Cell cycle and growth control: Biological Regulation and cancer. John Wiley and Sons, Hoboken NJ, In press.
Sluder G., Nordberg J.J., Miller, F.J., and Hinchcliffe E.H. (2004). A sealed preparation for long term observations of cultured cells. In Live cell imaging: A laboratory manual (ed. D.L. Spector and R.D. Goldman). Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor, New York. (In press).
Sluder G. (2004). Centrosome duplication and its regulation in the higher animal cell. Chapter 9 In: EA Nigg (Ed.) Centrosomes in Development and Disease, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, pp167-189.
Sluder G. and Nordberg J.J. (2004) The good, the bad and the ugly: the practical consequences of centrosome amplification. Curr Opin Cell Biol. Feb;16(1):49-54.
Hinchcliffe E.H. and Sluder G. (2003). "Do not (mis-)adjust your set": maintaining specimen detail in the video microscope. Methods Cell Biol. 2003;72:65-85.
Sluder G. and Nordberg J.J. (2003). Microscope basics. Methods Cell Biol. 2003;72:1-10.
Sluder G. and Wolf D.E. (Eds.) (2003). Digital Microscopy Methods Cell Biol . Vol. 72 Academic Press, San Diego.
Hinchcliffe E. H., and G. Sluder . (2002). Two for two: Cdk2 and its Role in Centrosome Doubling. Oncogene 21:6154-6160.
Khodjakov A., Rieder C.L., Sluder G. , Cassels G., Sibon O., and Wang C. (2002). De novo formation of centrosomes in vertebrate cells arrested during S phase. J. Cell Biol. 158: 1171-1181.
Hinchliffe E.H. and G. Sluder. (2001). Centrosome duplication: Three kinases come up a winner!. Curr. Biol. 11 (17): R698-R701 SEP 4 2001
Hinchliffe E.H. and G. Sluder . (2001). It takes two to tango: Understanding how centrosome duplication is regulated throughout the cell cycle. Genes and Development 15:1167-1181.
Hinchcliffe E.H., and G. Sluder , (2001). Preparation of Xenopus egg extracts for the study of centrosome duplication. Methods in Cell Biology . R.E. Palazzo ed. Academic Press, San Diego. Vol. 67: 269-287 .
Piel, M., J. Nordberg, U. Euteneuer, and M. Bornens. (2001). Centrosome-dependent exit of cytokinesis in animal cells. Science 291: 1550-1553.
Hinchcliffe, E.H., F.J. Miller, M. Cham, A. Khodjakov and G. Sluder . (2001). Requirement of a centrosomal activity for cell cycle progession through G1 into S phase. Science 291:1547-1550.
Sluder, G. and D. McCollum (2000). The mad ways of meiosis. Science 289:254-255.
Hinchcliffe, E. H., E. A. Thompson, F. J. Miller, J. Yang, and G. Sluder (1999). Nucleo-cytoplasmic interactions in the control of nuclear envelope breakdown and entry into mitosis in the sea urchin zygote. J. Cell Sci. 112:1139-1148.
Hinchcliffe, E. H., C. Li, E. A. Thompson, J. L. Maller, and G. Sluder (1999). Requirement of Cdk2 - Cyclin E Activity for Repeated Centrosome Reproduction in Xenopus Egg Extracts. Science. 283:851-854.
Office: Biotech IV, Suite 324
Phone: 508-856-8651
E-mail: Greenfield.Sluder@umassmed.edu
Keywords:
Biophysics,
Cell Biology,
Cell Cycle
Postdoctoral Position Available
A postdoctoral position is available to study in this laboratory.
Contact Dr. Sluder for additional details.
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