Cyclin Dependent Kinase-4
From Proteopedia
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- | [[Cyclin Dependent Kinase-4]] (CDK4) is a protein that is used in the cell cell cycle. The scene that is currently being shown here is when CDK4 is attached to Cyclin D[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclin_D]. CDK4 by itself is just the green protein shown <scene name='Cory_Tiedeman_sandbox/Cdk4/1'>here</scene>. This page will discuss the role of CDK4 in the cell cycle as well as CDK4's role in [[cancer]]. This page is being done as a project for a chemistry class (Chem. 461: Chemistry of Cancer) from Wabash College. See also [[Palbociclib]] and [[Abemaciclib]]. | + | [[Cyclin Dependent Kinase-4]] (CDK4) is a protein that is used in the cell cell cycle. The scene that is currently being shown here is when CDK4 is attached to Cyclin D[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclin_D]. CDK4 by itself is just the green protein shown <scene name='Cory_Tiedeman_sandbox/Cdk4/1'>here</scene>. This page will discuss the role of CDK4 in the cell cycle as well as CDK4's role in [[cancer]]. This page is being done as a project for a chemistry class (Chem. 461: Chemistry of Cancer) from Wabash College. See also [[Palbociclib]], [[Ribociclib]] and [[Abemaciclib]]. |
==Role in the Body Experiment<ref name="Cell Cycle">Vermeulen, Katrien, Dirk R. Van Bockstaele, and Zwi N. Berneman. "The Cell Cycle: A Review of Regulation, Deregulation and Therapeutic Targets in Cancer." Cell Proliferation 36 (2003): 131-49.</ref>== | ==Role in the Body Experiment<ref name="Cell Cycle">Vermeulen, Katrien, Dirk R. Van Bockstaele, and Zwi N. Berneman. "The Cell Cycle: A Review of Regulation, Deregulation and Therapeutic Targets in Cancer." Cell Proliferation 36 (2003): 131-49.</ref>== |
Current revision
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References
- ↑ Vermeulen, Katrien, Dirk R. Van Bockstaele, and Zwi N. Berneman. "The Cell Cycle: A Review of Regulation, Deregulation and Therapeutic Targets in Cancer." Cell Proliferation 36 (2003): 131-49.
- ↑ Yu, Qunyan, et al. "Requirement for Cdk4 Kinase Function in Breast Cancer." Cancer Cell 9 1 (2006): 23-32.[1]
Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)
Cory Tiedeman, Michal Harel, Joel L. Sussman, Alexander Berchansky, David Canner, Ann Taylor