“…Rather, the half-lives and relative accumulation of cyclin D1 and cyclin D1b were indistinguishable in most model systems (Lu et al, 2003;Solomon et al, 2003). By contrast, these same studies validated the prediction that cyclin D1b is constitutively nuclear in localization (Lu et al, 2003;Solomon et al, 2003). This was a critical observation, as constitutive nuclear localization of cyclin D1 (as achieved through mutation of T286) is known to promote oncogenic transformation (Alt et al, 2000).…”