Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Humans (3)
- Animals (2)
- COS Cells (2)
- Cercopithecus aethiops (2)
- Hela Cells (2)
-
- Membrane Proteins (2)
- Microfilament Proteins (2)
- Protein Transport (2)
- *Cell Movement (1)
- *Cytokinesis (1)
- 1 - Plant Development & Biomechanics (1)
- Actins (1)
- Amino Acid Sequence (1)
- Arabidopsis thaliana (1)
- Biological Assay (1)
- Cattle (1)
- Cell Line, Tumor (1)
- Cell Nucleus (1)
- Cell Proliferation (1)
- Cytochalasin D (1)
- Cytoskeletal Proteins (1)
- Developmental biomechanics (1)
- Diffusion (1)
- E coli (1)
- Endocytosis (1)
- Endosomes (1)
- Extracellular Signal-Regulated MAP Kinases (1)
- Flux balance analysis (FBA) (1)
- Gene Knockdown Techniques (1)
- Green Fluorescent Proteins (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Pten Enters The Nucleus By Diffusion, Fenghua Liu, Stefan Wagner, Robert Campbell, Jeffrey Nickerson, Celia Schiffer, Alonzo Ross
Pten Enters The Nucleus By Diffusion, Fenghua Liu, Stefan Wagner, Robert Campbell, Jeffrey Nickerson, Celia Schiffer, Alonzo Ross
Celia A. Schiffer
Despite much evidence for phosphatidylinositol phosphate (PIP)-triggered signaling pathways in the nucleus, there is little understanding of how the levels and activities of these proteins are regulated. As a first step to elucidating this problem, we determined whether phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) enters the nucleus by passive diffusion or active transport. We expressed various PTEN fusion proteins in tsBN2, HeLa, LNCaP, and U87MG cells and determined that the largest PTEN fusion proteins showed little or no nuclear localization. Because diffusion through nuclear pores is limited to proteins of 60,000 Da or less, this suggests that …
Geometric Constraints And The Anatomical Interpretation Of Twisted Plant Organ Phenotypes, Renate Weizbauer, Winfried S. Peters, Burkhard Schulz
Geometric Constraints And The Anatomical Interpretation Of Twisted Plant Organ Phenotypes, Renate Weizbauer, Winfried S. Peters, Burkhard Schulz
Winfried S. Peters
Novel Interactors And A Role For Supervillin In Early Cytokinesis, Tara Smith, Zhiyou Fang, Elizabeth Luna
Novel Interactors And A Role For Supervillin In Early Cytokinesis, Tara Smith, Zhiyou Fang, Elizabeth Luna
Elizabeth J. Luna
Supervillin, the largest member of the villin/gelsolin/flightless family, is a peripheral membrane protein that regulates each step of cell motility, including cell spreading. Most known interactors bind within its amino (N)-terminus. We show here that the supervillin carboxy (C)-terminus can be modeled as supervillin-specific loops extending from gelsolin-like repeats plus a villin-like headpiece. We have identified 27 new candidate interactors from yeast two-hybrid screens. The interacting sequences from 12 of these proteins (BUB1, EPLIN/LIMA1, FLNA, HAX1, KIF14, KIFC3, MIF4GD/SLIP1, ODF2/Cenexin, RHAMM, STARD9/KIF16A, Tks5/SH3PXD2A, TNFAIP1) co-localize with and mis-localize EGFP-supervillin in mammalian cells, suggesting associations in vivo. Supervillin-interacting sequences within BUB1, …
The Membrane-Associated Protein, Supervillin, Accelerates F-Actin-Dependent Rapid Integrin Recycling And Cell Motility, Zhiyou Fang, Norio Takizawa, Korey Wilson, Tara Smith, Anna Delprato, Michael Davidson, David Lambright, Elizabeth Luna
The Membrane-Associated Protein, Supervillin, Accelerates F-Actin-Dependent Rapid Integrin Recycling And Cell Motility, Zhiyou Fang, Norio Takizawa, Korey Wilson, Tara Smith, Anna Delprato, Michael Davidson, David Lambright, Elizabeth Luna
Elizabeth J. Luna
In migrating cells, the cytoskeleton coordinates signal transduction and redistribution of transmembrane proteins, including integrins and growth factor receptors. Supervillin is an F-actin- and myosin II-binding protein that tightly associates with signaling proteins in cholesterol-rich, 'lipid raft' membrane microdomains. We show here that supervillin also can localize with markers for early and sorting endosomes (EE/SE) and with overexpressed components of the Arf6 recycling pathway in the cell periphery. Supervillin tagged with the photoswitchable fluorescent protein, tdEos, moves both into and away from dynamic structures resembling podosomes at the basal cell surface. Rapid integrin recycling from EE/SE is inhibited in supervillin-knockdown …
Impact Of The Solvent Capacity Constraint On E. Coli Metabolism, Alexei Vazquez, Qasim Beg, Marcio Demenezes, Jason Ernst, Ziv Bar-Joseph, Albert-László Barabási, László Boros, Zoltán Oltvai
Impact Of The Solvent Capacity Constraint On E. Coli Metabolism, Alexei Vazquez, Qasim Beg, Marcio Demenezes, Jason Ernst, Ziv Bar-Joseph, Albert-László Barabási, László Boros, Zoltán Oltvai
Albert-László Barabási
Background: Obtaining quantitative predictions for cellular metabolic activities requires the identification and modeling of the physicochemical constraints that are relevant at physiological growth conditions. Molecular crowding in a cell's cytoplasm is one such potential constraint, as it limits the solvent capacity available to metabolic enzymes. Results: Using a recently introduced flux balance modeling framework (FBAwMC) here we demonstrate that this constraint determines a metabolic switch in E. coli cells when they are shifted from low to high growth rates. The switch is characterized by a change in effective optimization strategy, the excretion of acetate at high growth rates, and a …