* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Getting things where they need to go: Protein Targeting
Ancestral sequence reconstruction wikipedia , lookup
Neurotransmitter wikipedia , lookup
Protein (nutrient) wikipedia , lookup
Magnesium transporter wikipedia , lookup
Protein moonlighting wikipedia , lookup
Theories of general anaesthetic action wikipedia , lookup
List of types of proteins wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of proteins wikipedia , lookup
Model lipid bilayer wikipedia , lookup
Protein structure prediction wikipedia , lookup
Lipid signaling wikipedia , lookup
Paracrine signalling wikipedia , lookup
Chemical synapse wikipedia , lookup
Two-hybrid screening wikipedia , lookup
Proteolysis wikipedia , lookup
Protein–protein interaction wikipedia , lookup
Cell membrane wikipedia , lookup
Clinical neurochemistry wikipedia , lookup
Cell-penetrating peptide wikipedia , lookup
Protein adsorption wikipedia , lookup
G protein–coupled receptor wikipedia , lookup
Western blot wikipedia , lookup
Endomembrane system wikipedia , lookup
Previously Bio308 Hypotheses for molecular basis of bipolar disorder •Suggest problem lies in protein targeting How are proteins targeted and delivered? 3 Stages: Budding, targeting/docking and fusion How does a vesicle ‘know’ what components it should contain? How does it ‘know’ which membrane it should go to? How does it fuse when it gets there? Budding Fig 17-58 http://biology-animations.blogspot.com/2009/10/clathrin-animation.html Coat Components Clathrin COPI COPII Identity determined by what the vesicle contains and it’s coat. http://userpage.chemie.fu-berlin.de/biochemie/aghaucke/clath.jpg Budding II ER vesicle budding Sar1p N-terminal helix Amino Acid Key Highly hydrophobic + charged - charged Hydroxylated Other Sar1p-GTP form exposes helix that anchors protein to ER surface by ‘floating’ with hydrophobic a.a. interacting with membrane core Drin, G, and B. Antonny (2005) News and Views: Helices sculpt membrane. Nature vol: 437 Budding III ER vesicle budding Floating many Sar1p in top leaflet makes it ‘bigger’ than the bottom one. Results --> bulge that can more easily interact with coat proteins. Drin, G, and B. Antonny (2005) News and Views: Helices sculpt membrane. Nature vol: 437 Fission ER vesicle budding….fission Ring of parallel helices at neck might aid fission. ‘New’ data for ER; had seen a protein (epsin) help deform PM for clathrin coated vesicles. May suggest that using a helix to deform membrane is common mechanism for budding/fission Targeting/Docking: What happens after budding? How do vesicles dock with specific target membrane? http://dir2.nichd.nih.gov/nichd/cbmb/sob/in_vivo_dyn.html The SNARE hypothesis V-SNARE T-SNARE Role of p115 Role of Rab proteins retrograde Fig 17-59 Synaptic vesicle fusion VAMP Syntaxin SNAP 25 Rab3a Synaptotagmin Endocytosis Maybe protein delivered correctly but problem lies in levels of recycling Endocytosis can be used to control the amount of a certain type of protein found at the surface Pinocytosis ‘problem’ rate of pinocytosis internalizes 100% of PM per hour ? (How can this be?) Types of pinocytic vesicles Clathrin-coated Caveolae Types of endocytosis Fluid phase– soluble components ‘got caught’ in vesicle Receptor-mediated– selected to be in vesicle Select how? •Ligands bind receptors •Receptors cluster Why do the receptors cluster and make a vesicle? •Receptors have signaling sequences •Signaling regions interact with adaptins •Adaptins recruit coats budding occurs Endocytosis– then what? Endosomal sorting Separate: Recycle (R ) Degrade (L) Transcytose Remove and Degrade (R & L) Distinguishing between types Similarities and differences between vesicles? Transport Exocytic Endocytic How could you tell them apart experimentally? Neurotransmitters are stored in and secreted from vesicles. Neurotransmitter receptors are delivered to dendrite in vesicles. Could sorting and targeting problems be at the root of bipolar disorder? If sorting and targeting are the problems would you predict alteration of something like the NT receptor, or a SNARE or of a protein like NSF, SNAP25? Molecular Roads and Infrastructure Bipolar disorder •Is it the cellular equivalent of ‘dead letter box’? •Are cytoskeletal ‘problems’ a likely cause for for this disorder? What are the components of the cytoskeleton and what do they do?