BSC300 Yoder Cell Bio Exam 3
LDL (low density lipoproteins)
"bad" cholesterol, synthesized in the liver and delivers cholesterol to body cells via the bloodstream
adherens junctions
"belts" near apical surface, complexes that promote tight cell-cell contact
HDL (high density lipoproteins)
"good" cholesterol, transport cholesterol from tissues to the liver for excretion and are associated with lowering "bad cholesterol" levels
filopodia
(aka microspikes) probing extensions that reside within lamellipodia
*Current model of movement through the Golgi complex: cisternae mature and progress from cis to trans side of the complex. Transport vesicles move in a retrograde fashion (from trans toward medial and cis) delivering Golgi resident proteins (enzymes) back to appropriate locations.
*Current model of movement through the Golgi complex: cisternae mature and progress from cis to trans side of the complex. Transport vesicles move in a retrograde fashion (from trans toward medial and cis) delivering Golgi resident proteins (enzymes) back to appropriate locations.
*Newly synthesized proteins leave the ER via transport vesicles through the ERGIC which fuse with the cis-Golgi network (CGN). Proteins pass through the medial to the trans-Golgi network (TGN), and along the way are further modified, depending on protein function and final destination.
*Newly synthesized proteins leave the ER via transport vesicles through the ERGIC which fuse with the cis-Golgi network (CGN). Proteins pass through the medial to the trans-Golgi network (TGN), and along the way are further modified, depending on protein function and final destination.
*The Golgi complex is not uniform from one end to the other. The various Golgi regions have different compositions of enzymes that modify and process proteins differently.
*The Golgi complex is not uniform from one end to the other. The various Golgi regions have different compositions of enzymes that modify and process proteins differently.
*Though distinct for each tissue, the ECM is generally composed of: long, fibrous proteins that form a mesh-like network surrounding the cell, highly glycosylated proteoglycans that cushion the cell, transmembrane proteins that are interconnected to these extracellular molecules and respond to both mechanical and chemical signals.
*Though distinct for each tissue, the ECM is generally composed of: long, fibrous proteins that form a mesh-like network surrounding the cell, highly glycosylated proteoglycans that cushion the cell, transmembrane proteins that are interconnected to these extracellular molecules and respond to both mechanical and chemical signals.
unfolded protein response (UPR)
1)halt protein translation to prevent accumulation of misfiled proteins 2)degrade misfolded proteins 3)activate signaling pathways that lead to increased production of ER chaperones triggered in condition of extreme stress (heat, sickness) where misfoled proteins are generated more quickly than ERAD system can process them
organelle-specific enzymes interconvert lipids, inclusion/exclusion process during vesicle formation, lipid-transfer proteins bind and transport lipids without the use of vesicle transport
3 factors contributing to variation of organelle lipid composition
central sheath, radial spoke, interdoublet bridge
A proteinaceous _______________ connects the inner microtubule pair of an axoneme to the outer tubule doublets by _____________ protein complexes. Doublets are interconnected to one another by an _______________.
flippases
ATP-dependent and lipid specific, catalyze uni-directional leaflet translocation, responsible for establishing lipid asymmetry (for example, the cytoplasmic leaflet localization of phosphatidylserine), help to establish the asymmetry of the membrane
motor proteins
ATP-hydrolysis protein machines that bind specific cargo, like vesicles or organelles, via adapter proteins; move unidirectionally along the appropriate cytoskeletal track in a step-wise manner
transverse (T) tubules
Action potential in muscles is propagated into the cell interior by _______________, plasma membrane involutions that connects to the SR (sarcoplasmic reticulum).
phosphorylation state
Activity of MAPs is controlled by their _______________.
dolichol phosphate
All proteins originating in the endomembrane system are initially glycosylated by a core carbohydrate chain of 14 sugar monomers. It is assembled and covalently linked to the lipid carrier ________________ (2NAG, 9 mannose, 3 glucose monomers arranged in trident orientation).
AP2
Binding of a(n) ______________ adapter to PI(4,5)P2 causes a conformational change exposing the cargo binding site, allowing interaction with specific membrane receptors.
caged lattice
COPII Coated Vesicles: Adapter complex (adapter proteins) recruits two additional sec proteins that aggregate the cargo and spontaneously assemble as a ________________ surrounding the membrane vesicle, pinching it free of the ER membrane.
free ribosomes
Cytosolic proteins, peripheral membrane proteins, nuclear proteins, and proteins destined for chloroplasts, mitochondria, and peroxisomes are generated by ______________________.
neural plate
During embryonic development, ectodermal cells elongate and form a _____________ as microtubules become oriented parallel to the cell's axis.
connexin, connexon
Each channel of a gap junction is composed of six copies of the transmembrane protein __________ which are organized into a complex called a ____________. These complexes between adjacent cells create a gap junction.
N-terminus signal sequence
Free or RER synthesis is determined by amino acid sequences. Proteins destined for RER synthesis possess a _____________________.
Rabs
G-protein family that provide specificity between vesicle and target membrane, motor proteins deliver the vesicles via movement along the microtubule network
keratin
Hemidesmosomes contain a dense plaque with intermediate filaments consisting of the protein ____________ projecting into the cytoplasm.
integrins
IM receptor proteins that hold the ECM in stable attachment to the cell, animal-specific transmembrane heterodimers with distinct alpha and beta subunits, critical in anchoring cells to substratum or other cells and in integrating extracellular and intracellular environments via 2-way signaling
prolines and lysines
In collagen, ____________________ (amino acids) are heavily hydroxylated by specific enzymes allowing cross linking via H-bonds stabilizing the trimer.
hyaluronic acid
In the ECM, proteoglycans are cross-linked to a non sulfated GAG (glycosaminoglycan), _________________________, forming a giant complex that resists crushing forces, cushions cells, provides binding sites for growth hormones to protect from proteases, and regulates diffusion of small signaling molecules in developing embryos.
inactive, cannot
In the GDP bound state, G-proteins are (active/inactive) and (can/cannot) interact with target proteins.
active, can
In the GTP bound state, G-proteins are (active/inactive) and (can/cannot) regulate other proteins via direct allosteric interactions.
troponin, tropomyosin
In the unstimulated state, tropomyosin blocks myosin binding sites on actin monomers. Following impulse, released Ca2+ binds to _____________, causing a conformational change that shifts ____________ exposing myosin binding sites
ATP
Kinesin moves in a hand-over-hand model at a velocity proportional to the concentration of ______________.
ER
Most membrane lipids are synthesized entirely within the ______________.
oligosaccharide additions
Most proteins produced in the ER and processed in the Golgi are extensively modified by _________________.
processive
Movement of kinesin is __________________: motor protein moves in a hand-over-hand model along an individual microtubule for a long distance without falling off
I-IV, V
Of the 5 classes of intermediate filaments, type(s) ___________ is/are cytoplasmic, while type(s) ___________ is/are present in the inner lining of the nuclear envelope
independent, actin microfilaments
Phagocytosis is clathrin (dependent/independent), driven by __________________ extending pseudopods around extracellular material to form a phagosome.
retention, retrieval
Proteins are kept in the ER by one of two mechanisms: ________________ of resident molecules based on physical properties like solubility or association with large portion complexes. ________________ of "escaped" molecules back to the compartment where they reside (via the identification of "retrieval signals" in the amino acid sequence).
dissociation
Sar-mediated hydrolysis of GTP to GDP causes a conformation change and _________________ of the COPII protein lattice from vesicles.
early endosomes, late endosomes
Signaling receptors are kept within the ____________ which fuse and mature into _____________ (which have an even lower pH). After fusion, these units fuse with lysosomes and their products are degraded and either exocytosed or used as building blocks for metabolic processes.
plus-end
The _____________ of the microtubule terminates with beta-subunits and is the dynamic end where growth and disassembly occurs.
minus-end
The _______________ of the microtubule terminates with alpha-subunits and is static; it does not experience growth or disassembly.
actin
The dynamic cytoskeletal element of microfilaments is a polymer of _______________ monomers, arranged in a consistent, polar fashion into two-stranded, helical, rope-like structures
v-SNAREs, t-SNAREs
______________ (which attach to the vesicle membrane) and ______________ (which attach to the target membrane) have complementary domains that promote fusion of the two lipid bilayers.
dynamin
a G-protein required for release of clathrin-coated vesicles from the membrane; polymerizes around the neck of the budding vesicle, GTP hydrolysis cause conformation change that twists the neck, pinching it free of the plasma membrane
RNA interference
a genetic technique that blocks translation of a specific mRNA (generates a loss of function phenotype for the associated gene), can be used as a rapid screening approach to identify genes required for a specific process
green fluorescent protein (GFP)
a small protein isolated from a jellyfish that can be attached to different intracellular proteins to reveal their movement within a living cell
Golgi complex
a system of flattened, disk-like cisternae with dilated rims and associated vesicles and tubules
microfilaments
actin-based filament group that coordinates most animal cell motility, aspects of intercellular transport, muscle contraction, and cell division; polymerization is ATP dependent and monomers are ATPases
excitation-contraction coupling
action potential spreads to T tubules and travels down into the cell, causing the muscles to contract
inside-out signaling
activation of a number of cytoplasmic ligands binds the cytoplasmic tails and separates the alpha and beta chains; this induces a conformation change that allows integral to bind ECM ligands
ubiquitin ligases
add long chains of the protein ubiquitin to aberrant proteins as part of ERAD
O-linked glycosylation
addition of NAG sugar to the -OH group of specific serine and threonine residues of certain proteins, occurs exclusively in the Golgi
laminin
along with fibronectin, this protein plays an essential role as a road map for migrating cells during animal development
constitutive secretion
always occurring, functions to maintain the extracellular matrix and plasma membrane
extracellular matrix (ECM)
an organized network beyond the plasma membrane that plays key regulatory roles in determining cell shape and activities; extensively involved in cell signaling as it regulates diffusion of ligands and their interactions with receptors
centrosome
animal specific structures that initiate microtubule nucleation and regulate their dynamics, each contains two barrel-shaped centrioles
treadmilling
at low ATP-actin concentrations, filaments reach a steady state where addition to the plus end equals loss from the minus end (likely plays an important role at the leading edge of migrating cells to push the membrane forward)
centriole
barrel-shaped molecule that comprises centrosomes, composed of 9 triples of microtubules arranged in a pinwheel orientation (1 full and 2 incomplete microtubules in each triplet set)
signaling receptors
bind to extracellular molecules and initiate a cellular response (ex. divide, stop dividing, migrate, etc.)
troponin
binds and links actin and tropomyosin in the sarcomere
Sar1-GTP
binds the ER outer membrane and extends an alpha-helix into the outer leaflet, expanding the leaflet and initiating curvature
protofilaments
building blocks of microtubules, assembled from heterodimers of non-identical alpha- and beta-tubulin subunits
pinocytosis
category of endocytosis, aka bulk-phase endocytosis, nonspecific uptake of extracellular fluids that does not involve receptors or clathrin vesicles
glycocalyx
cell coat, a glycolprotein-polysaccharide covering that surrounds the cell membrane of epithelial cells, mediates cell-cell and cell-substratum interactions and provides mechanical protection to cells and inhibits the movement of extracellular material towards the plasma membrane, also helps facilitate the bind of important signaling molecules to the cell surface
mesenchymal cell
cells able to dissociate from an epithelium and migrate independently
axoneme
central microtubule core of both cilia and flagella, consist of microtubules in a 9+2 arrangement (9 doublets of microtubules surrounding a pari of central microtubules), nucleated by basal bodies and the plus-ends extend into the membrane surrounded cilia or flagella
subcellular fractionation
centrifugation that separates organelles based on density, buoyancy, or mass
BiP
chaperone proteins that inactivate membrane associated protein sensors (when gone, the sensors will relay information about misfolded proteins to activate UPR); if this molecule is accumulated as a result of an extended UPR, the loss of it activates apoptosis
unconventional myosins
class of myosin; can carry vesicles to sites within the cell, function cooperatively with microtubule motors to deliver targets to correct locations, often handing off or accepting cargo from dynein or kinesin motors
conventional myosin II
class of myosin; principal motor proteins that promote muscle contraction, migrate toward the plus end of microfilaments, also assist in cell division, tensile strength of focal adhesions, cell migration, and the direction of axonal growth cone movement; composed of 4 light chains and 2 heavy chains
receptor-mediated endocytosis
clathrin dependent uptake of specific extracellular ligands following their binding to specific transmembrane receptors
signal peptidase
cleaves the signal sequence once the ribosome-bound mRNA is in the RER lumen
fibrosis
common disease of many tissues caused by excessive production of collagen-containing connective tissue
TOM complex
complex found on the outer mitochondrial membrane that includes a pre-sequence receptors and channel to move unfolded protein into inter membrane space
ribosomes
complexes that translate mRNAs into protein
glycosylation
composition and arrangement of sugars for a protein; ultimately it is both cell-type and organelle specific (meaning that in different cell types, the same protein can be distinct); modifications can alter protein conformation or solubility, participate in inter- and intracellular signaling, protein-protein interaction, and cell-cell recognition
connective tissues
consist mostly of extracellular material secreted by the resident cells
neuromuscular junction
contact between nerve and muscle
plectin
cross-bridging protein that establishes connections between intermediate filaments (IFs) and other components of the cytoskeleton, organelles, and the nucleus
myofibrils
cylindrical actin-myosin rich strands that comprise skeletal muscle fibers, consists of a repeating array of sarcomeres
plasmodesmata
cytoplasmic channels passing through cell walls of adjacent plant cells
glycosyltransferase
destination-specify enzyme that catalyzes modification of ER synthesized proteins to produce species-, individual-, and cell-specific patterns
proteasomes
digests ubiquitin-tagged proteins as part of ERAD
Riemann-Pick disease
disease in which cholesterol cannot be transported out of the lysosomes, leading to neuronal degeneration and early childhood death
scurvy
disease resulting from vitamin C deficiency that prevents proline hydroxylation and collagen processing
desmosomes
disk-shaped adhesive junctions between cells, contain cadherins that link the two cells across a narrow gap
TIM complex
distinct inner membrane complex that directs the nascent protein to either the mitochondrial matrix (where the protein's N-terminal pre-sequence is removed) or as an integral inner membrane protein (pre-sequence is internal and not removed)
G-proteins
diverse family of small regulatory proteins that control function/activity of many proteins/enzymes; bind GTP and contain an intrinsic GTPase activity (hydrolyze GTP to GDP) that controls its on/off state
actin-binding proteins
diverse group of proteins that affect localized assembly/disassembly of actin filaments for the purpose of promoting crawling and phagocytosis, and as such their expression/activity are tightly regulated in response to stimuli
microtubule associated proteins (MAPs)
diverse group of proteins that attach to microtubules and function to increase or decrease stability by promoting either polymerization or disassembly
focal adhesions
docking sites were cells adhere to their substratum and send signals to the cell interior
epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)
driven by cadherins, mediates many of the changes in adhesive contacts during embryonic development
endomembrane system
encompasses all membranes of the organelles; nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi complex, endosomes, lysosomes, and vacuoles functioning as an interconnected but discontinuous coordinated unit
GTP
energy storage required molecule for microtubule assembly, form dimers to create a stabilizing cap for the plus-end
oligosaccharyltransferase
enzyme responsible for the transfer of multiple sugar groups to proteins (namely, proteins produced in the ER and modified in the Golgi)
oligosaccharyltransferase
enzyme that transfers glycan to specific asparagine residues within the sequence Asp-X-Ser/Thr
acid hydrolases
enzymes contained in lysosomes that can collectively digest every type of biological molecule, require a low pH (maintained by a proton pump) for activity
matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs)
enzymes secreted by migrating fibroblast cells that degrade ECM materials
glucosidases
enzymes which cleave 2 of the 3 terminal glucose monomers
UGGT
enzymes which inspects the new protein for proper folding
scramblases
evenly distribute lipids to both sides of the membrane, non-specific, do not require input of energy, help to establish the asymmetry of the membrane
outside-in signaling
extracellular ECM ligands (primarily collagen and fibronectin) can bind sites in some integral dimers inducing conformational change Such signaling leads to cytoplasmic interactions with diverse proteins that may affect: cytoskeletal dynamics, change in cell shape, cytoplasmic signaling cascades that lead to gene activation or inactivation, secretion of signaling molecules from other cells)
cis
face of the Golgi complex closest to the ER
trans
face of the Golgi complex closest to the outside of the cell
selectins
family of integral membrane glycoproteins that recognize and bind specific gylcosylation patterns on cell surface proteins; calcium-dependent; contain a small cytoplasmic domain, a single membrane-spanning domain, and a large extracellular segment; mediate transient interaction between migrating white blood cells (leukocytes) and blood vessel walls at sites of inflammation
collagens
fibrous glycoproteins found only in the ECM, most abundant proteins in the human body, provide high tensile strength, tetramer of helical polypeptide chains wound around each other
actin filaments
filaments that make up the cytoskeleton and are attached to the cytoplasmic domains of cadherin molecules via linking proteins like beta-catenin
ERGIC (ER-Golgi intermediate complex)
formed by the fusion of transport vesicles with each other, acts as a shuttle system that delivers proteins and newly synthesized lipids to the Golgi complex for further processing and sorting
alpha
gamma-tubulin only associates with ___________-tubulin, thus establishing microtubule polarity
intermediate filaments
heterogeneous group of proteins that assemble as strong, flexible, rope-like fibers that provide mechanical strength; less dynamic, highly stable; basic building block is a rod-like tetramer formed by two antiparallel dimers via spontaneous assembly
microtubules
hollow, cylindrical, rod-like structures that each contain an array of 13 protofilaments aligned longitudinally along its length
axonemal dynein
hydrolyzes ATP, providing the mechanical forces that promote both cilia and flagellar movement
actin, tropomyosin, troponin
identify in order, separated by commas
ER-associated degradation (ERAD)
improperly folded proteins are transferred to membrane associated ubiquitin ligases, such tagged proteins are exported to the cytoplasm where they are digested by proteasomes (ex: this is the fate of the CFTR proteins that fail to fold properly in people with cystic fibrosis)
collagen type IV
instead of forming fibrils, this type of collagen is non-fibrillar and is restricted to the basement membrane
intraflagellar transport
kinesin and dynein transport materials into and out of both growing and mature cellular movement structures, promoting growth and maintenance
cadherins
large family of glycoproteins that mediate Ca2+-dependent cell-cell adhesion; join cells of similar types to one another; also involved in transmitting signals from the ECM to the cytoplasm
fibroblasts
largely autonomous, non-connected, motile cells that secrete materials of the connective tissues (ex. dermis of skin, cartilage)
beta-catenin
linking protein that assists in connecting the cytoplasmic domains of cadherin molecules to the actin filaments of the cytoskeleton
keratin
major structural proteins of epithelial cells establishing a protective barrier in such tissues
neurofilaments
major supporting network in neuronal axons, type of intermediate filament
coated vesicles
membraneous sacs surrounded by specific protein networks, used to carry materials between endomembrane compartments
endoplasmic reticulum
membranous network, continuous with the outer nuclear membrane, that penetrates into much of the cytoplasm, highly dynamic
vesicular transport model
model of movement through Golgi complex (combined with competing model to give our current model) in which cargo is shuttled from the CGN toward the TGN in vesicles; the actual stacks remain relatively unchanged
cisternal maturation model
model of movement through Golgi complex (combined with competing model to give our current model) in which each cisternae "matures" as it moves from the cis face to the trans face; cis face forms from fusion of vesicles arriving from her ER and cisternae mature as they progress toward the trans face
myosins
molecular motors of actin filaments, divided into two groups: conventional (type II) and unconventional (types I, III-XVIII)
immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF)
most are involved in immune function, however some mediate calcium-independent cell-cell interactions; includes VCAM (vascular cell-adhesion molecule), NCAM (neural cell-adhesion molecule), and L1 (neural development)
myosin
motor protein that moves along microfilament tracks
dynein
motor protein that moves towards the minus-end of microtubules (towards the nucleus), also responsible for the movement of cilia and flagella, moves like a "drunken sailor" due to large head size
kinesin
motor protein that moves towards the plus-end of microtubules (away from the nucleus), heterotetramer of two heavy chains and two light chains, moves in a hand-over-hand model due to smaller head unit
clathrin-coated vesicles
move materials from TGN to endosomes, lysosomes, and become secretory granules destined for plasma membrane (anterograde); also import proteins from the plasma membrane (retrograde).
retrograde
movement "backward" from the ERGIC and Golgi back to the ER, or from the trans Golgi to the cis Golgi cisternae
anterograde
movement "forward" from the ER to the ERGIC and Golgi, or from the cis Golgi to the trans Golgi cisternae
skeletal muscle fibers
multinucleate cells resulting from embryonic fusion of myoblasts and are associated as sheathed muscle bundles within skeletal muscles, each fiber contains hundreds of myofibrils
sarcomeres
muscle contractile units with a stereotypical arrangement of actin and myosin fibers, each has a distinct banding pattern due to the overlap of thick filaments and thin filaments
basal bodies
name given to centrioles found at the base of eukaryotic cilia and flagella, they coordinate growth and organization of the microtubules in these motility structures
medial network
name given to the area of the Golgi complex between the cis face and trans face
Sec proteins
name of the 4 structural proteins that compose the COPII vesicle coat; on the cytoplasmic surface of the ER, these Sec proteins recognize and bind soluble cargo receptors and ER export signal sequences of TM (transmembrane) proteins
signal recognition particle (SRP)
name of the protein that recognizes an N-terminus signal sequence on a piece of mRNA
lamins
name of type V intermediate filaments which are present in the nuclear envelope
TOC and TIC
names of both protein complexes that import chloroplast targeted proteins
pericentriolar material (PCM)
nebulous load of various accessory proteins that surrounds centrioles
cisternae
network of flattened sacs that composes the endoplasmic reticulum (both RER and SER)
cytonemes
new type of cell-cell communication, also called "tunneling nanotubes", protrusions that extend from the plasma membrane that enable different animal cells to touch over long distances
tropomyosin
occupies the gap between the two actin strands of the sarcomere, inhibits myosin from binding to the actin filaments
gap junction
open channels between animal cells that allow cytoplasmic sharing and intercellular communication, play an important role in ion passage (allowing muscle cells to contract synchronously)
trans-Golgi network
packaging station where proteins are segregated into different types of membrane enclosed vesicles for delivery to the plasma membrane or organelles
protein coats
part of a coated vesicle, they have 2 functions: to curve the membrane, forming spherical vesicles that detach from cisternae, and to select components to be carried by the vesicle, cargo (proteins/lipids) as well as targeting and docking proteins
Z line
part of sarcomere; anchor proteins that form the boundaries between sarcomeres; where actin filament plus ends are bound; minus ends extend toward sarcomere center
H zone
part of sarcomere; myosin tails only (center of sarcomere)
M line
part of sarcomere; the middle of the sacromere where tails of antiparallel myosin fibers overlap
A band
part of sarcomere; thick filaments, myosin filaments engaging with actin filaments
I band
part of sarcomere; thin filament, actin filaments only
cortex
plasma membrane under which the majority of actin is restricted
smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER)
primary site of lipid synthesis, detoxifies various organic compounds (liver), synthesizes steroid hormones in endocrine cells, sequesters calcium ions from cytoplasm of muscle cells (highly regulated), continuous with the RER
endocytosis
process by which material (cell surface receptors and bound extracellular ligands) is taken up by the cell
exocytosis
process by which material leaves the cell
N-linked glycosylation
process by which new covalent bonds are formed between a sugar and the nitrogen within the side chain of asparagine, plays a critical role in evaluating proper folding of proteins as they are translated and processed in the ER
autophagy
process in which an organelle is surrounded by a double membrane forming an autophagosome, which fuses with lysosomes allowing compartmentalized digestion; while some material is exocytosed, a large amount is recycled as metabolites for cellular activities
ER quality control (ERQC) system
process that ensures proper folding of ER synthesized proteins
titin
protein (giant, long, elastic fiber) that extends from the Z line to the M band - providing elasticity, resting tension, and preventing the sarcomere from being pulled apart during muscle stretching
fibronectin
protein that facilitates interactions between ECM components, transmits mechanical force as signals to attached cells which relay this information to the cell interior for responses via the integrin receptors
translocon complex
protein that mediates RER protein translocation, mRNA is bound and delivered here by SRP
proteoglycans
protein-polysaccharide complex with a core protein attached to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) - each GAG chain has a repeating disaccharide structure, extremely acidic due to the presence of both sulfate and carboxyl groups
WASP proteins
proteins that are activated via stimulus at the cell surface and, upon activation, recruit and activate Arp2/3 G protein complex
SNAREs
proteins that promote fusion of the vesicle and target membrane
lipid-transfer proteins
proteins which bind and transport lipids without the use of vesicle transport
lamellipodium
protruding leading edge formed along a substrate as a result of force generated by the receipt of a chemotactic extracellular signal
adapter proteins
recruited by activated Sar-GTP, finds and binds appropriate cargo receptors and transmembrane proteins, aggregating them into a confined space, this recruitment continues to curve the ER membrane; aka sec 23/24 proteins
housekeeping receptors
responsible for continuous uptake of material necessary for general activities (like LDL receptors); after internalization, these are recycled back to the membrane for reuse
gamma-TURKS (gamma-tubulin ring complexes)
ring structures formed by gamma-tubulin in the pericentiolar material, same diameter as a microtubule, serves as the seed site for polymerization of the alpha- or beta-tubulin dimers, can be assembled on established microtubules to promote branching
hemidesmosomes
rivets that promote basal attachment of epithelial cells to the basement membrane
regulated secretion
secretion occurs only in response to a specific stimulus (ex: digestive enzymes of pancreatic cells, neurotransmitters, hormones)
epithelial
sheets of closely packed cells tightly connected to one another and a defined extracellular material (the basement membrane), form a protective barrier that line both the external surface and internal cavities and lumina of tissues
transport vesicles
shuttle materials (mainly proteins and lipids) back and forth, most materials end up leaving the cell
ER export signal
signal in peptide sequence of proteins bound for deliver to the Golgi, faces the cytoplasm, (in soluble proteins) this signal is recognized and bound by specific COPII cargo receptor proteins
cis-Golgi network
sorting station, distinguishes proteins that need to be shipped back to ER from those that will be distributed throughout the endomembrane system
endosomes
sorting stations formed by the fusion of vesicles with other vesicles and tubules after internalization
basement membrane (basal lamina)
specialized ECM under the basal surface of epithelia, a continuous sheet that maintains cell attachment, provides signals for cell survival (survival of most cells is contact dependent), separate distinct tissues within an organ, serves as substratum for cell migration, forms a barrier to macromolecules
tight junctions
specialized contacts between epithelial cells, prevent H2O and solutes from squeezing in-between cells, located apical to junctional complex between cells composed of the two TM proteins occludins and claudins, some are permeable to specific ions or solutes
microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs)
specialized structures for nucleation and assembly of microtubules
RGD
specific ligand squence possessed by extracellular proteins that interact with integrins
dynamic instability
spontaneous disassembly of microtubules, occurs when the incorporation of new GTP-bound dimers is slower than the rate of GTP-hydrolysis
clathrin coated pits
substances that enter the cell through clathrin-mediated RME (receptor-mediated endocytosis) become bound to _________________ on the plasma membrane; these regions invaginate and then pinch free into the cytoplasm
situs inversus
syndrome that often results from mutations in genes encoding ciliary proteins, inability to circulate signaling molecules during early animal embryogenesis, results in left-right body symmetry is reversed compared to the normal state
biosynthetic or secretory pathway
synthesis, modification, and transport of proteins and lipids through the endomembrane system for ultimate release from secretory cells
rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER)
synthesizes proteins to be part of the endomembrane system or exocytosed from the cell, covered in ribosomes on cytosolic surface, continuous with the outer membrane of the nuclear envelope
pre-sequence
targeting sequence found on the unfolded proteins that are destined for the mitochondria or chloroplasts
metastasis
the ability of some cancer cells to spread beyond their original site due to changes in their cell-adhesion properties (are less adhesive (cadherins), no longer anchorage dependent (interns), are able to penetrate several barriers (MMPs), are able to invade normal tissues (MMPs, EMT)
occludins and claudins
the two transmembrane proteins that make up a tight junction
triskelion
three heavy and three light chains of clathrin linked together
microtubules, microfilaments, and intermediate filaments
three types of filamentous protein structures that make up the cytoskeleton, polymers of protein subunits held together by weak, non-covalent interactions, highly dynamic
growth cones
tip of migrating neuronal axons
sliding-microtubule mechanism
tubules are fixed in position by radial spokes and the basal body; therefore, when dynein hydrolyzes ATP and attempts to "walk" towards the minus ends of associated beta-tubules, this causes adjacent microtubules to slide past one another; by precisely controlling when and which dynes hydrolyze ATP, distinct patterns of ciliary and flagellar movements are coordinated
calnezin and calreticulin
two chaperones that are part of the ERQC system and promote proper folding of the monoglucosylated polypeptide by preventing aggregation and premature export from the ER
E-selectin
type of selectin on endothelial cells
P-selectin
type of selectin on platelets and endothelial cells
L-selectin
type of selectin on white blood cells
gamma-tubulin
type of tubulin which is localized to the PCM and is critical for MT (microtubule) nucleation, serves as a protective cap for the minus-end, preventing it from being disassembled
phagocytosis
uptake of particulate matter
autoradiography
uses radioactive labeled materials and exposure to photographic film to analyze diverse biological processes
COPI-coated vesicles
vesicles that move materials in a retrograde fashion
COPII-coated vesicles
vesicles that move materials in an anterograde fashion