Term
There are three types of filament in the cytoskeleton, name them... |
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Definition
intermediate filaments, microtubules, and actin filaments. |
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Definition
Give the cell mechanical strength and help reduce shear stress. Are intermediate in size and non polar |
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Definition
Aide in the positioning of organelles, and intercellular transport. Are larger in size, and are polar. |
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Definition
Help in shaping the cell, and total cell locomotion. Are smallest in size and are polar. |
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Term
Filaments are made of small _______ ____, which are held together by ______. The _______ _____ help with organization |
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Definition
protein sub units, a lot of weak non-covalent interactions, accessory proteins. |
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Term
Filaments are made of Protofilaments, explain why these give the filaments strength. |
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Definition
They can be multiple long strings of filaments, arranged end to end laterally, as well as end to end. Then, they twist around each other, making them strong |
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Term
stability dependent subunits |
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Definition
Actin- small globular, intermediate have longer subunits which makes them a little stronger. |
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Definition
means the sides are different. Microtubles and actin are polar. |
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The filaments of Microtublues -forms -these link together to form |
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Definition
Alpha and Beta Tubulins form dimers. protofilaments |
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Term
____ protofilaments interact to form a hollow tube. Both alpha and Beta Tubulin bind ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Where do you find microtubules? |
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Definition
flagella and cilia; also find them in spindle complex; all cells have microtubles that originate in microtubule organizing centers (MTOC)aka centrosomes. |
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Beta tubulin is always on top- |
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Definition
Positive end, it sticks out to periphery |
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Definition
Immunofluorescence microscopy |
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Term
drug that inhibits formation of microtubule filaments |
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Definition
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Term
Actin subunit is a ______ monomer called _______ g-actin binds ____ Organized - polar 2 protofilaments align _____ to one another and _____ together |
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Definition
globular, g-actin, ATP parallel, twist |
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Term
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Definition
More so for movement from cell to cell, the railroads of the cell. |
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Definition
actin for cells that move themselves, more on the outside of cells. |
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Term
Actin - ropelike structures that provide ______ as well as _______; important for ...; highly _____ structures |
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Definition
-Strength, Flexibility -motility and structure -dynamic |
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Definition
is the formation of a motile cell surface that contains a meshwork of newly polymerized actin filaments. |
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Definition
the phenomenon in which somatic cells, bacteria, and other single-cell or multicellular organisms direct their movements according to certain chemicals in their environment |
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Term
Intermediate Filaments Are they polar or non polar? Are they required in all cell types? Shape? |
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Definition
Non Polar, no, Coiled coil proteins |
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Term
Intermediate Filaments 2 _____ are parallel to each other in _____ 2 dimers link together _____ - making a _____ _____ is considered the ____ - notice both ends look same |
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Definition
Monomers, dimers. Anti-paralell, tetramer Tetramer, protofilament |
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Term
Intermediate Filaments Need_ parallel _____ to pack together (8x4=32) to make filament |
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Definition
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Term
The 8 tetramers are twisted into a... |
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Definition
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Definition
Nuclear Lamins, A, B, and C. Keratin, and Axonal neurons. |
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Term
Epidermolysis bullosa simplex - |
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Definition
a problem with the keratins (The boy whose skin fell off). |
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Term
More Keratin diseases One nucleotide change - - |
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Definition
changes a leucine to a proline disrupts the secondary structure (alpha helix) - disrupts the function of Keratin |
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Term
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS or Lou Gehrig’s Disease) - Linked to SOD mutations - how it causes defects in neurofilaments still not known |
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Definition
accumulation and abnormal assembly of neurofilaments in motor neuron cell bodies |
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Term
Dynamic nature of Polar filaments Polarity affects... |
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Definition
Filaments are always being made and broken down (polymerized and depolymerized) ... the rate of growth + end is faster at both adding and removing subunits - end is the other end |
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Term
Three stages of filament growth: Nucleation Polymerization - Maintain length - Breakdown |
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Definition
- how do filaments start in the first place -growth treadmilling catastrophe |
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Term
3 growth stages of filaments |
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Definition
Nucleation (lag) Elongation (growth) Steady State (equilibrium) |
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Term
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Definition
The concentration of free subunits when the rate of addition is equal to the rate of dissociation |
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Term
If the number of subunits available is above the Cc... If the number of subunits available is below the Cc... There are different Cc for the.... |
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Definition
...you will be making filaments ...filaments will be depolymerizing ... + and - end of filaments |
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Term
Treadmilling... Hydrolysis of _____occurs continuously Occurs slowly on monomers ... |
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Definition
maintaining length. ATP and GTP not incorporated into filaments |
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Term
Treadmilling... But, hydrolysis occurs rapidly once monomers are bound - ... T-form (____) and D-form (_____) |
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Definition
...the ADP or GDP remain bound until removed (ATP or GTP) (ADP or GDP) |
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Term
Free subunits are ____ Rate of _____ affects whether the end is ______(_______) |
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Definition
T-form addition ATP or GTP (ATP cap or GTP cap) |
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Term
Cytosol is high in ATP and GTP D-form leans toward ____ T-form _____ Addition at _____ and removal at ____ |
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Definition
disassembly while toward assembly + end, - end |
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Term
Soluble subunits are in ___ form Polymers are a mixture of... Polymerization followed by ____ _____ |
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Definition
T ...T form and D Form. Nucleotide Hydrolysis. |
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Term
Minus end addition is slow... Plus end addition is fast... Cc(T) is less than |
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Definition
hydrolysis catches up. hydrolysis lags behind. Cc(D) |
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Term
Drugs used to study filament formation Drug actions |
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Definition
bind to monomers and prevent their addition to growing filaments - causes depolymerization bind to filaments and stabilize their structures |
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Term
Actin Specific Drugs Phalloidin - |
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Definition
binds to actin filaments and stabilizes them (from mushrooms) |
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Term
Actin Specific Drugs
Latrunculin |
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Definition
- binds subunits and prevents polymerization (from sea sponge) |
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Term
Actin-specific Drugs Cytochalasin D |
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Definition
- inhibits addition of monomers at the + end causing |
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Term
Destabilization of actin causes cells to |
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Definition
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Microtubule specific drugs
Taxol - |
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Definition
widely used in cancer patients; binds and stabilizes microtubules (Yew tree bark); kills rapidly dividing cells (toxic) |
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Microtubule specific drugs
Nocadazole |
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Definition
- binds subunits and prevents polymerization |
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Microtubules specific drugs
Colchicine - |
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Definition
binds free tubulin leading to microtubule depolymerization (meadow saffron or autumn crocus) |
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Definition
- dismantles neurofilament bundles in peripheral nerve axons and hence a neurotoxin |
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