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Intracellular transport

The mechanism of inhibition has not been characterized, but it is probably related to the ionophoretic properties of these antibiotics. Monensin has been shown to inhibit the intracellular transport of viral membrane proteins of cells infected with Semliki Forest vims (169). The formation of syncytia, normally observed when T-lymphoblastoid cell line (CEM) cells are cocultivated with human immunodeficiency vims (HlV-l)-infected T-ceU leukemia cell line (MOLT-3) cells, was significantly inhibited in the presence of monensin (170). This observation suggests that the viral glycoproteins in the treated cells were not transported to the cell surface from the Golgi membrane. [Pg.172]

Protein Trafficking and Quality Control Intracellular Transport Palmitoylation Endothelins... [Pg.223]

Chaperones bind to exposed hydrophobic surfaces of polypeptide substrates, and through either ATP-dependent or ATP-independent mechanisms facilitate the folding/assembly, intracellular transport, degradation, and activity of polypeptides. [Pg.347]

The term intracellular transport comprises both the correct targeting and the mechanism of transport of... [Pg.648]

Neither chemical nor pharmacological chaperones lead to wild-type expression levels of the mutant proteins at the cell surface. Alternative or additional strategies are needed to improve the intracellular transport of the mutant proteins. In the future, dtugs may also be developed that influence those components of the quality control system that are involed in the retention of misfolded proteins. [Pg.1019]

Aridor M, Hannan LA (2000) Traffic jam a compendium of human diseases that affect intracellular transport processes. Traffic 1 836-851... [Pg.1019]

Intracellular Transport Intrathecal Application Intrathecal Space Intrinsic Efficacy Intron... [Pg.1495]

Microtubules are universally present in eukaryotes from protozoa to the cells of higher animals and plants (Porter, 1966 Hardham and Gunning, 1978 Lloyd, 1987), but they are absent in mammalian erythrocytes and in prokaryotes. Microtubules participate in a number of cellular functions including the maintenance of cell shape and polarity, mitosis, cytokinesis, the positioning of organelles, intracellular transport to specific domains, axoplasmic transport, and cell locomotion. The diversity of microtubule fimctions suggests that not all microtubules are identical and that different classes of microtubules are present in different cell types or are localized in distinct domains in the same cell type (Ginzburg et al., 1989). [Pg.4]

MxA and MxB Mixoviras proteins A and B IFN-induced GTPases that block intracellular transport of viral components... [Pg.211]

The free fatty acid uptake by tissues is related directly to the plasma free fatty acid concentration, which in turn is determined by the rate of lipolysis in adipose tissue. After dissociation of the fatty acid-albumin complex at the plasma membrane, fatty acids bind to a membrane tty acid transport protein that acts as a transmembrane cotransporter with Na. On entering the cytosol, free fatty acids are bound by intracellular fatty acid-binding proteins. The role of these proteins in intracellular transport is thought to be similar to that of serum albumin in extracellular transport of long-chain fatty acids. [Pg.207]

Vesicles lie at the heart of intracellular transport of many proteins. Recently, significant progress has been made in understanding the events involved in vesicle formation and transport. This has transpired because of the use of a number of approaches. These include establishment of cell-free systems with which to study vesicle formation. For instance, it is possible to observe, by electron microscopy, budding of vesicles from Golgi preparations incubated with cytosol and ATP. The development of genetic approaches for studying vesicles in yeast has also been crucial. The piemre is complex, with its own nomenclamre (Table 46-7), and involves a variety of cytosolic and membrane proteins, GTP, ATP, and accessory factors. [Pg.509]

Various Disorders Result From Mutations in Genes Encoding Proteins Involved in Intracellular Transport... [Pg.513]

Nonmuscle cells perform mechanical work, including self-propulsion, morphogenesis, cleavage, endocytosis, exocytosis, intracellular transport, and changing cell shape. These cellular functions are carried out by an extensive intracellular network of filamentous structures constimting the cytoskeleton. The cell cytoplasm is not a sac of fluid, as once thought. Essentially all eukaryotic cells contain three types of filamentous struc-mres actin filaments (7-9.5 nm in diameter also known as microfilaments), microtubules (25 nm), and intermediate filaments (10-12 nm). Each type of filament can be distinguished biochemically and by the electron microscope. [Pg.576]

The hypothesis of the participation of those cholesterol transporters (NPCILI and ABCAl) in the carotenoid transport remains to be confirmed, especially at the in vivo human scale. If the mechanism by which carotenoids are transported through the intestinal epithelial membrane seems better understood, the mechanism of intracellular carotenoid transport is yet to be elucidated. The fatty acid binding protein (FABP) responsible for the intracellular transport of fatty acids was proposed earlier as a potential transporter for carotenoids. FABP would transport carotenoids from the epithelial cell membrane to the intracellular organelles such as the Golgi apparatus where CMs are formed and assembled, but no data have illustrated this hypothesis yet. [Pg.163]

In the family of cation pumps, only the Na,K-ATPase and H,K-ATPase possess a p subunit glycoprotein (Table II), while the Ca-ATPase and H-ATPase only consist of an a subunit with close to 1 000 amino acid residues. It is tempting to propose that the p subunit should be involved in binding and transport of potassium, but the functional domains related to catalysis in Na,K-ATPase seem to be contributed exclusively by the a subunit. The functional role of the P subunit is related to biosynthesis, intracellular transport and cell-cell contacts. The P subunit is required for assembly of the aj8 unit in the endoplasmic reticulum [20]. Association with a j8 subunit is required for maturation of the a subunit and for intracellular transport of the xP unit to the plasma membrane. In the jSl-subunit isoform, three disulphide... [Pg.10]


See other pages where Intracellular transport is mentioned: [Pg.127]    [Pg.535]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.414]    [Pg.469]    [Pg.470]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.490]    [Pg.557]    [Pg.558]    [Pg.648]    [Pg.649]    [Pg.649]    [Pg.650]    [Pg.650]    [Pg.651]    [Pg.651]    [Pg.672]    [Pg.740]    [Pg.1059]    [Pg.1111]    [Pg.1142]    [Pg.1278]    [Pg.1279]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.416]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.75]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.180 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.254 , Pg.256 , Pg.263 ]




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Calcium intracellular transport

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Intracellular particle transport

Intracellular transport of bile acids

Intracellular transport vesicles

Intracellular transport/distribution

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