Kvido Stříšovský
Intramembrane proteolytic systems: mechanisms, regulation and biological roles |
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We are fascinated by the complexity of biological membranes and the chemical processes occurring in their context. In particular, we are interested in intramembrane proteases - enzymes with the unusual ability to recognise and cleave the transmembrane domains of other membrane proteins within the hydrophobic milieu of lipid membranes. This unexpected biochemical reaction typically results in the activation of dormant signaling factors or activation of resident membrane proteins. About 25 to 30% of all proteins encoded in a genome are transmembrane, and controlled proteolysis of many of them has major biological consequences. Intramembrane proteases thus regulate a growing list of biological processes as diverse as developmental and stress signaling, membrane homeostasis, or pathogenicity of microbes. They have been implicated in human diseases including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and some infectious diseases, which has fuelled the interest in these unusual enzymes.
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