Search results for "Cellular compartment"

showing 10 items of 20 documents

Interaction of Neuronal Calcium Sensor-1 (NCS-1) with Phosphatidylinositol 4-Kinase β Stimulates Lipid Kinase Activity and Affects Membrane Trafficki…

2001

Phosphatidylinositol 4-kinases (PI4K) catalyze the first step in the synthesis of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate, an important lipid regulator of several cellular functions. Here we show that the Ca(2+)-binding protein, neuronal calcium sensor-1 (NCS-1), can physically associate with the type III PI4Kbeta with functional consequences affecting the kinase. Recombinant PI4Kbeta, but not its glutathione S-transferase-fused form, showed enhanced PI kinase activity when incubated with recombinant NCS-1, but only if the latter was myristoylated. Similarly, in vitro translated NCS-1, but not its myristoylation-defective mutant, was found associated with recombinant- or in vitro translated P…

Cell Membrane PermeabilityLipoproteinsNeuronal Calcium-Sensor ProteinsLipid kinase activityBiologyPhosphatidylinositolsbehavioral disciplines and activitiesBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundsymbols.namesakePhosphatidylinositol PhosphatesChlorocebus aethiopsmental disordersAnimalsCalcium SignalingPhosphatidylinositol1-Phosphatidylinositol 4-KinaseMolecular BiologyCellular compartmentMyristoylationKinaseCalcium-Binding ProteinsCell MembraneNeuropeptidesBiological TransportCell BiologyTransfectionGolgi apparatusCell CompartmentationRatsCell biologychemistryBiochemistryNeuronal calcium sensor-1COS Cellssymbolsbiology.proteinCattleMyristic AcidsProtein Processing Post-TranslationalProtein BindingJournal of Biological Chemistry
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Regulation of Plant Transporters by Lipids and Microdomains

2010

Transporters in the broad sense, that is, carriers, pumps, and channels, are proteins inserted in a lipid bilayer separating two cellular compartments. This lipid bilayer is not only the physical support of such proteins, but also a powerful way to regulate their activity. This chapter will first summarize the different means by which lipids can regulate the activity of transmembrane proteins (including the physical properties of the bilayer, its dynamic lateral compartmentalization, and the presence of particular lipid species acting as cofactors). It will then illustrate these general rules with examples of such regulations found in plant literature and, as a reference, in animal studies.

ChemistryBilayerBiophysicsMembrane raftTransporterCompartmentalization (psychology)Lipid bilayerLipid raftTransmembrane proteinCellular compartment
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Type-II histone deacetylases: elusive plant nuclear signal transducers

2013

Since the beginning of the 21st century, numerous studies have concluded that the plant cell nucleus is one of the cellular compartments that define the specificity of the cellular response to an external stimulus or to a specific developmental stage. To that purpose, the nucleus contains all the enzymatic machinery required to carry out a wide variety of nuclear protein post-translational modifications (PTMs), which play an important role in signal transduction pathways leading to the modulation of specific sets of genes. PTMs include protein (de)acetylation which is controlled by the antagonistic activities of histone acetyltransferases (HATs) and histone deacetylases (HDACs). Regarding p…

Histone AcetyltransferasesGeneticsPhysiologyPlant ScienceBiologyCell biologyHistoneAcetylationbiology.proteinNuclear proteinSignal transductionGeneCellular compartmentProtein deacetylationPlant, Cell & Environment
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In vivo imaging of an elicitor-induced nitric oxide burst in tobacco

2000

A growing body of evidence suggests that nitric oxide (NO), an important signalling and defence molecule in mammals, plays a key role in activating disease resistance in plants, acting as signalling molecule and possibly as direct anti-microbial agent. Recently, a novel fluorophore (diaminofluorescein diacetate, DAF-2 DA) has been developed which allows bio-imaging of NO in vivo. Here we use the cell-permeable DAF-2 DA, in conjunction with confocal laser scanning microscopy, for real-time imaging of NO in living plant cells. Epidermal tobacco cells treated with cryptogein, a fungal elicitor from Phytophthora cryptogea, respond to the elicitor with a strong increase of intracellular NO. NO-i…

Hypersensitive responsePlant ScienceNitric OxideNitric oxideFungal Proteinschemistry.chemical_compoundIn vivoTobaccoBotanyGeneticsEnzyme InhibitorsCellular compartmentMicroscopy ConfocalbiologyAlgal Proteinsfungifood and beveragesCell BiologyRespiratory burstCell biologyElicitorNitric oxide synthasePlants Toxicchemistrybiology.proteinNitric Oxide SynthaseIntracellularThe Plant Journal
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Nouvelles perspectives concernant la structure et la fonction du domaine carboxyl terminal de Hfq

2015

Accumulating evidence indicates that RNA metabolism components assemble into supramolecular cellular structures to mediate functional compartmentalization within the cytoplasmic membrane of the bacterial cell. This cellular compartmentalization could play important roles in the processes of RNA degradation and maturation. These components include Hfq, the RNA chaperone protein, which is involved in the post-transcriptional control of protein synthesis mainly by the virtue of its interactions with several small regulatory ncRNAs (sRNA). The Escherichia coli Hfq is structurally organized into two domains. An N-terminal domain that folds as strongly bent β-sheets within individual protomers to…

IDP intrinsically-disordered proteinslcsh:Lifelcsh:QR1-502sub-membrane macromolecular assemblyPlasma protein bindingsRNA small non-coding RNABiochemistrylcsh:Microbiologyamyloid fibrilsProtein biosynthesis0303 health sciences[SDV.BBM.BS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Structural Biology [q-bio.BM]Escherichia coli Proteins030302 biochemistry & molecular biologyHfqCTRp Hfq C-terminal peptideFTIR Fourier transform infrared spectroscopyNTR N-terminal regionCompartmentalization (psychology)Cell biology[SDV.BBM.BP]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/BiophysicsRNA Bacterialsmall non-coding ribonucleic acid (RNA)BiochemistryFSD Fourier self-deconvolutionTransfer RNAAmyloid fibrilProtein BindingBiophysicsBiologyHost Factor 1 Protein03 medical and health sciencesEscherichia coliThT thioflavin T[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular BiologyProtein Structure QuaternaryncRNA regulatory non-coding RNAPost-transcriptional regulationMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologyOriginal PaperC-terminusRNA[SDV.BBM.BM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Molecular biologyCell Biologycellular compartmentalizationWT wild-typeProtein Structure Tertiarylcsh:QH501-531Host Factor 1 ProteinCTR Hfq C-terminal regionribonucleic acid (RNA) processing and degradationBiophysicpost-transcriptional regulationBioscience Reports
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Calcium signaling in plant cell organelles delimited by a double membrane.

2006

AbstractIncreases in the concentration of free calcium in the cytosol are one of the general events that relay an external stimulus to the internal cellular machinery and allow eukaryotic organisms, including plants, to mount a specific biological response. Different lines of evidence have shown that other intracellular organelles contribute to the regulation of free calcium homeostasis in the cytosol. The vacuoles, the endoplasmic reticulum and the cell wall constitute storage compartments for mobilizable calcium. In contrast, the role of organelles surrounded by a double membrane (e.g. mitochondria, chloroplasts and nuclei) is more complex. Here, we review experimental data showing that t…

OrganellesEndoplasmic reticulumCell Membranechemistry.chemical_elementCell BiologyCell compartmentationCalciumBiologyPlantsCalcium in biologyDynamics of cytosolic and organelle calciumCell biologyCytosolCytosolchemistryCytoplasmOrganellePlant cell organizationCalciumCalcium SignalingMolecular BiologyCellular compartmentCalcium signalingPlant cell signalingBiochimica et biophysica acta
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Electron Microscopic Studies of Spruce Needles in Connection with the Occurrence of Novel Forest Decline.

1988

Needles of four spruce trees showing different degrees of novel kinds of forest decline were investigated by electron microscopy. Green needles appearing at least superficially still intact were selected for the present investigation. Most of the mesophyll appeared to be undamaged. However, groups of atypical mesophyll cells were found close to the endodermis or the hypodermis. The chloroplasts of the apparently damaged cells were particularly affected. Changes in the matrix of the chloroplasts, i.e,. increased affinity to osmium, occurrence of extensive nests of plastoglobuli, as well as damage to the membranes, i.e. lesions in the envelope and abnormal thylakoid membranes, were observed. …

PhysiologyMembrane structurePlant ScienceBiologyMatrix (biology)law.inventionChloroplastMembranelawThylakoidBotanyGeneticsBiophysicsEndodermisElectron microscopeAgronomy and Crop ScienceCellular compartmentJournal of Phytopathology
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Special Issue on “Proteostasis and Autophagy”

2019

Autophagy is a highly conserved eukaryotic pathway responsible for the lysosomal degradation (and subsequent recycling) of cellular components such as proteins, protein aggregates, and a growing number of organelles or cellular compartments [...]

Proteasome Endopeptidase ComplexChemistryAutophagyEukaryotaUbiquitin-Protein Ligase ComplexesGeneral MedicineProtein aggregationMitochondriaCell biologyEditorialn/aProteostasislcsh:Biology (General)Cellular componentOrganelleAutophagyProteostasislcsh:QH301-705.5Cellular compartmentCells
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Senescence-associated HSP60 expression in normal human skin fibroblasts

2005

Normal mammalian fibroblasts cultured in vitro undergo a limited number of divisions before entering a senescent phase in which they can be maintained for long periods but cannot be induced to divide. Senescent cells become unresponsive to growth-promoting signals and exhibit senescent cell morphology with flattened and enlarged cell shape. Several chaperones have a direct effect on cellular senescence. HSP60 has been largely studied in our laboratories and it has been associated with uncontrolled cell proliferation in tumor cells. Since senescence is firmly regulated during cell cycle progression, we wanted to investigate HSP60 protein level during cellular senescence. Our data show that H…

SenescenceCell divisionCell growthfungiVimentinMitochondrionCell cycleBiologyAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Cell biologybiology.proteinAnatomyCell agingCellular compartmentThe Anatomical Record Part A: Discoveries in Molecular, Cellular, and Evolutionary Biology
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Cationic Au Nanoparticle Binding with Plasma Membrane-like Lipid Bilayers: Potential Mechanism for Spontaneous Permeation to Cells Revealed by Atomis…

2014

Despite being chemically inert as a bulk material, nanoscale gold can pose harmful side effects to living organisms. In particular, cationic Au nanoparticles (AuNP+) of 2 nm diameter or less permeate readily through plasma membranes and induce cell death. We report atomistic simulations of cationic Au nanoparticles interacting with realistic membranes and explicit solvent using a model system that comprises two cellular compartments, extracellular and cytosolic, divided by two asymmetric lipid bilayers. The membrane-AuNP+ binding and membrane reorganization processes are discovered to be governed by cooperative effects where AuNP+, counterions, water, and the two membrane leaflets all contr…

chemistry.chemical_classificationta114ta221Cationic polymerizationNanoparticlePermeationSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsGeneral EnergyMembranechemistryExtracellularBiophysicsOrganic chemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCounterionLipid bilayerta116Cellular compartment
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