BIO270H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Immunoglobulin Light Chain, Cell Migration, Trophoblast

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8 Mar 2016
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Lecture 7 (november 4, 2015): movement and muscle physiology part 1. Overview all physiological processes depend on movement: intracellular transport, cell shape, motility. Multicellular animals can move from place to place: this is unique to animals, the same cytoskeleton elements are common to all organisms, microtubules, microfilaments. Cytoskeleton and motor proteins all movement is due to the same cellular machinery cytoskeleton: protein based intracellular network, everywhere in the cell, vesicles move along cytoskeleton tracts, microtubule/microfilaments. Polarized so that motor proteins know where to go. Made of tubulin tubulin is a dimer of alpha tubulin and beta tubulin both alpha and beta must bind gtp which leads to dimerization and makes tubulin alpha = - end, beta = + end. With a high enough tubulin concentration, they line up to make a protofilament. Microtubule associated proteins (maps) the beta end binds to ends of microtubule and can stop depolymerization: important for maintaining asymmetric cell shape.

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