Smalheiser_1996_Mol.Biol.Cell_7_1003

Reference

Title : Proteins in unexpected locations. - Smalheiser_1996_Mol.Biol.Cell_7_1003
Author(s) : Smalheiser NR
Ref : Molecular Biology of the Cell , 7 :1003 , 1996
Abstract :

Members of all classes of proteins--cytoskeletal components, secreted growth factors, glycolytic enzymes, kinases, transcription factors, chaperones, transmembrane proteins, and extracellular matrix proteins--have been identified in cellular compartments other than their conventional sites of action. Some of these proteins are expressed as distinct compartment-specific isoforms, have novel mechanisms for intercompartmental translocation, have distinct endogenous biological actions within each compartment, and are regulated in a compartment-specific manner as a function of physiologic state. The possibility that many, if not most, proteins have distinct roles in more than one cellular compartment has implications for the evolution of cell organization and may be important for understanding pathological conditions such as Alzheimer's disease and cancer.

PubMedSearch : Smalheiser_1996_Mol.Biol.Cell_7_1003
PubMedID: 8862516

Related information

Citations formats

Smalheiser NR (1996)
Proteins in unexpected locations.
Molecular Biology of the Cell 7 :1003

Smalheiser NR (1996)
Molecular Biology of the Cell 7 :1003