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  • Faculty of Science / Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
  • Department of Cell and Molecular Biology / Institutionen för cell- och molekylärbiologi (-2011)
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för cell- och molekylärbiologi
  • Redigera dokument
  •   Startsida
  • Faculty of Science / Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
  • Department of Cell and Molecular Biology / Institutionen för cell- och molekylärbiologi (-2011)
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för cell- och molekylärbiologi
  • Redigera dokument
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The Chaperonin Containing TCP-1 : Interactions with the Mammalian Cytoskeleton

Sammanfattning
The eukaryotic Chaperonin Containing TCP-1 (CCT) is a heterooligomeric chaperonin essential for enabling the cytoskeletal proteins actin and tubulin to fold to their native state. The eight CCT subunits are encoded by individual genes and are present in cells as the ~960kDa oligomer, as components of micro-complexes, and as monomeric subunits. In addition to the well-characterised substrate folding mechanism of the CCT oligomer, roles for CCT subunits as monomeric proteins are emerging. The work in this thesis illustrates the dependence upon functional CCT and its roles in cytoskeletal organisation. Levels of functional CCT have far-reaching implications for cellular functions dependent upon an intact cytoskeleton and siRNA targeting of CCT subunits results in growth arrest and reduced levels of native actin and tubulin. Targeting each CCT subunit individually by siRNA revealed different effects upon cytoskeletal organisation, suggestive of distinct roles for specific CCT monomers. Cell shape and microfilament polymerisation are influenced by CCT monomers with CCTε levels appearing particularly important for these processes. Furthermore, CCTε and to a lesser extent ζ and θ were found to co-localise to microfilaments and CCT subunits associated with non-soluble protein assemblies following detergent extraction are predominantly monomeric. Gelsolin, an actin filament severing and capping protein was identified as a CCT-binding protein, providing another link between CCT activity and cytoskeletal organisation. Although shown to bind the CCT oligomer with some degree of specificity, it is most likely that gelsolin does not represent a CCT folding substrate. siRNA of CCT subunits influences gelsolin levels differently depending upon the target subunit, suggestive of some regulation between CCT monomers, F-actin, and gelsolin levels. The work presented in this thesis indicates that CCT influences the mammalian cytoskeleton far beyond its involvement in folding newly synthesised actin and tubulin polypeptides and implicates CCT subunits in their monomeric assembly state as likely perpetrators of such activity.
Delarbeten
Grantham J, Brackley KI, Willison KR. Substantial CCT activity is required for cell cycle progression and cytoskeletal organization in mammalian cells. Exp Cell Res. 2006 Jul; 312(12):2309-24::PMID:: 16765944
 
Brackley KI, Grantham J. Subunits of the chaperonin CCT interact with F-actin and influence cell shape and cytoskeletal assembly. Exp Cell Res. 2010 Feb; 316(4):543-553::PMID:: 19913534
 
Brackley KI, Grantham J. Interactions between the actin filament capping and severing protein gelsolin and the molecular chaperone CCT: evidence for non-classical substrate interactions. Manuscript
 
Examinationsnivå
Doctor of Philosophy
Universitet
Göteborgs universitet. Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology ; Institutionen för cell- och molekylärbiologi
Disputation
Fredagen den 23 april 2010, kl. 10.00, Hörsal Ragnar Sandberg, Medicinaregatan 7a
Datum för disputation
2010-04-23
E-post
karen.brackley@cmb.gu.se
URL:
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/22089
Samlingar
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för cell- och molekylärbiologi
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
Fil(er)
Spikblad (92.47Kb)
Thesis Frame (534.1Kb)
Datum
2010-03-31
Författare
Brackley, Karen
Nyckelord
Molecular chaperone
Cytoskeleton
Publikationstyp
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8060-6
Språk
eng
Metadata
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