Riezman, H Munn, A Geli, M I Hicke, L
Published in
Experientia
Endocytosis is a general term that is used to describe the internalization of external and plasma membrane molecules into the cell interior. In fact, several different mechanisms exist for the internalization step of this process. In this review we emphasize the work on the actin-dependent pathways, in particular in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisi...
Simon, V R Pon, L A
Published in
Experientia
Evidence for actin-dependent organelle movement was first obtained from studies of cytoplasmic streaming in plants. These studies, together with cell-free organelle motility studies and biophysical analyses of muscle myosin, support a model whereby organelle-associated motor molecules utilize the energy of adenosine triphosphate binding and hydroly...
Luciano, P Géli, V
Published in
Experientia
Targeting signals of mitochondrial precursors are cleaved in the matrix during or after import by the mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP). This enzyme consists of two nonidentical alpha- and beta-subunits each of molecular weight of about 50 kDa. In mammals and fungi, MPP is soluble in the matrix, whereas in plants the enzyme is part of the cy...
Edelstein, S J Changeux, J P
Published in
Experientia
A key statement of the 1965 Monod-Wyman-Changeux (MWC) model for allosteric proteins concerns the distinction between the ligand-binding function (Y) and the relevant state function (R). Sequential models predict overlapping behavior of the two functions. In contrast, a straightforward experimental consequence of the MWC model is that for an oligom...
Mihara, K Omura, T
Published in
Experientia
In vitro import studies have confirmed the participation of cytosolic protein factors in the import of various precursor proteins into mitochondria. The requirement for extramitochondrial adenosine triphosphate for the import of a group of precursor proteins seems to be correlated with the chaperone activity of the cytosolic protein factors. One of...
Nelson, N Klionsky, D J
Published in
Experientia
Vacuolar H(+)-adenosine triphosphatase (V-ATPase) is composed of distinct catalytic (V1) and membrane (V0) sectors containing several subunits. The biochemistry of the enzyme was mainly studied in organelles from mammalian cells such as chromaffin granules and clathrin-coated vesicles. Subsequently, mammalian cDNAs and yeast genes encoding subunits...
Desbarats, L Schneider, A Müller, D Bürgin, A Eilers, M
Published in
Experientia
c-myc was discovered as the cellular homologue of the transduced oncogene of several avian retroviruses. The gene encodes a transcription factor, which forms a heteromeric protein complex with a partner protein termed Max. In mammalian cells, Myc is a central regulator of cell proliferation and links external signals to the cell cycle machinery. My...
Carafoli, E Garcia-Martin, E Guerini, D
Published in
Experientia
The Ca2+ pump of the plasma membrane (PMCA) is regulated by a number of agents. The most important is calmodulin (CaM), which binds to a domain located in the C-terminal portion of the pump, removing it from an autoinhibitory site next to the active site. The CaM-binding domain is preceded by an acidic sequence which contains a hidden signal for en...
Mason, T L Pan, C Sanchirico, M E Sirum-Connolly, K
Published in
Experientia
Mitochondria possess their own ribosomes responsible for the synthesis of a small number of proteins encoded by the mitochondrial genome. In yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the two ribosomal RNAs and a single ribosomal protein, Var1, are products of mitochondrial genes, and the remaining approximately 80 ribosomal proteins are encoded in the nucle...
Fox, T D
Published in
Experientia
Mitochondrial gene expression in yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, depends on translational activation of individual mRNAs by distinct proteins encoded in the nucleus. These unclearly coded mRNA-specific translational activators are bound to the inner membrane and function to mediate the interaction between mRNAs and mitochondrial ribosomes. This co...