|
Department of Protein Structure Institute of Physiology AS CR, v.v.i. Videnska 1083 142 00 Praha 4 – Krc Czech Republic |
|
|
|
Česky/English |
PROJECTS |
|
|
Our group is inquired
with structural biology (the relationship between the structure
and function of certain groups of proteins), particularly we focus on the proteins which participates in the signal transmission in the cell. |
|
PROBLEMATICS: |
|
The study of structure
and function of 14-3-3 proteins and their complexes. Our research team has been studying the 14-3-3 proteins which are highly conserved regulatory molecules found in all eukaryotes. First they have
been isolated from the bovine
brain and their unusual name “14-3-3”, originates from their elution
and migration pattern on two-dimensional DEAE-cellulose chromatography and starch
gel electrophoresis. 14-3-3 proteins
have the ability of binding
the functionally different signal proteins, including kinases, fosfatases and transmembrane receptors by changing their function. Through the functional modulation of a wide range of
binding partners, 14-3-3 proteins are involved in many processes, including cell cycle regulation, metabolism control, apoptosis, and control of gene transcription.More
than 300 proteins have been described
as binding partners till now. Main
goal of these projects is mechanistic
understanding of the 14-3-3 protein function in the regulation of selected 14-3-3 binding partners: for example the
interaction of 14-3-3
protein with forkhead transcription factor
FOXO4, with the regulatory domain of the tyrosine hydroxylase, interaction
with ASK1 kinase, with the regulator of G-protein signaling RGS3 and phosducin.
Recently, we have been studying two yeast isoforms of 14-3-3 protein (BMH1 and BMH2) and the interaction
of BMH with neutral trehalase in yeast. |
|
The
study of the cytoplasmatic domains of TRP channels.
Transient receptor potential
(TRP) channels are a wide
family of non-selective ion channels responsible for monovalent and divalent cation influx into the cells.
Members of this family are involved in many sensory processes
such as invertebrate vision and hearing,
mammalian temperature-, mechano- and chemo-sensation. The TRP channels discovered so far can be divided into
seven subfamilies according to their primary structure: TRPV, TRPC,
TRPA, TRPM, TRPP, TRPML and TRPN. All are predicted to have six transmembrane helices (S1–S6)
and a pore-forming loop between S5 and S6, with varying sizes of intracellular amino and carboxy termini, and are thought to form tetrameric assemblies. Both the N- and C-terminal intracellular domains are comprised of many different domains that are responsible for binding different
compounds that can regulate the channels. Our goal is to provide the
structural insight into the interactions of TRP channels with ATP, calmodulin and PIP. |
|
METHODS |
|
• Biochemical approach (recombinant protein expression, site-directed mutagenesis, enzyme kinetics) • Biophysical approach (fluorescence spectroscopy, X-ray
crystallography, analytical ultracentrifugation, mass spectrometry, protein
structure modeling, molecular dynamics simulations). • Crystallography of selected
complexes → These methods enable us to better understand the details how
is regulated the activity and function of protein-protein complexes. |
|
SOLVED STRUCTURES |
|
|
|
|
|