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Search results 301 to 328 out of 328 for Tbcc

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0.018s
Type Details Score
Protein
Organism: Mus musculus/domesticus
Length: 84  
Fragment?: true
Protein
Organism: Mus musculus/domesticus
Length: 72  
Fragment?: true
Publication    
First Author: Nithianantham S
Year: 2015
Journal: Elife
Title: Tubulin cofactors and Arl2 are cage-like chaperones that regulate the soluble αβ-tubulin pool for microtubule dynamics.
Volume: 4
Protein Domain
Type: Family
Description: The tubulin heterodimer consists of one alpha- and one beta-tubulin polypeptide. In humans, five tubulin-specific chaperones termed TBCA/B/C/D/E are essential for bring the alpha- and beta-tubulin subunits together into a tightly associated heterodimer. Following the generation of quasi-native beta- and alpha-tubulin polypeptides (via multiple rounds of ATP-dependent interaction with the cytosolic chaperonin), TBCA and TBCB bind to and stabilise newly synthesised beta- and alpha-tubulin, respectively. The exchange of beta-tubulin between TBCA and TBCD, and of alpha-tubulin between TBCB and TBCE, resulting in the formation of TBCD/beta and TBCE/alpha. These two complexes then interact with each other and form a supercomplex (TBCE/alpha/TBCD/beta). Interaction of the supercomplex with TBCC causes the disassembly of the supercomplex and the release of E-site GDP-bound alpha/beta tubulin heterodimer, which becomes polymerization competent following spontaneous exchange with GTP [].This entry represents tubulin binding cofactor A (TBCA) from animal, plants and fungi. Human TBCA functions as a molecular chaperone for beta-tubulin []. Budding yeast TBCA, also known as Rbl2, may bind transiently to free beta-tubulin, which then passes into an aggregated form that is not toxic []. The sequence identity of Rbl2 and human TBCA is only 32%, they appear to be structurally distinct and may interact with beta-tubulin by different mechanisms [].
Protein Domain
Type: Homologous_superfamily
Description: The tubulin heterodimer consists of one alpha- and one beta-tubulin polypeptide. In humans, five tubulin-specific chaperones termed TBCA/B/C/D/E are essential for bring the alpha- and beta-tubulin subunits together into a tightly associated heterodimer. Following the generation of quasi-native beta- and alpha-tubulin polypeptides (via multiple rounds of ATP-dependent interaction with the cytosolic chaperonin), TBCA and TBCB bind to and stabilise newly synthesised beta- and alpha-tubulin, respectively. The exchange of beta-tubulin between TBCA and TBCD, and of alpha-tubulin between TBCB and TBCE, resulting in the formation of TBCD/beta and TBCE/alpha. These two complexes then interact with each other and form a supercomplex (TBCE/alpha/TBCD/beta). Interaction of the supercomplex with TBCC causes the disassembly of the supercomplex and the release of E-site GDP-bound alpha/beta tubulin heterodimer, which becomes polymerization competent following spontaneous exchange with GTP [].This entry represents tubulin binding cofactor A (TBCA) from animal, plants and fungi. Human TBCA functions as a molecular chaperone for beta-tubulin []. Budding yeast TBCA, also known as Rbl2, may bind transiently to free beta-tubulin, which then passes into an aggregated form that is not toxic []. The sequence identity of Rbl2 and human TBCA is only 32%, they appear to be structurally distinct and may interact with beta-tubulin by different mechanisms []. The structure of TBCA has three helices forming a bundle closed fold with left-handed twist topology going up-and-down.
Protein Domain
Type: Family
Description: The tubulin heterodimer consists of one alpha- and one beta-tubulin polypeptide. In humans, five tubulin-specific chaperones termed TBCA/B/C/D/E are essential for bring the alpha- and beta-tubulin subunits together into a tightly associated heterodimer. Following the generation of quasi-native beta- and alpha-tubulin polypeptides (via multiple rounds of ATP-dependent interaction with the cytosolic chaperonin), TBCA and TBCB bind to and stabilise newly synthesised beta- and alpha-tubulin, respectively. The exchange of beta-tubulin between TBCA and TBCD, and of alpha-tubulin between TBCB and TBCE, resulting in the formation of TBCD/beta and TBCE/alpha. These two complexes then interact with each other and form a supercomplex (TBCE/alpha/TBCD/beta). Interaction of the supercomplex with TBCC causes the disassembly of the supercomplex and the release of E-site GDP-bound alpha/beta tubulin heterodimer, which becomes polymerization competent following spontaneous exchange with GTP [].This entry represents tubulin-folding cofactor D (TBCD) and its homologues. Its ability to interact with beta tubulin is regulated via its interaction with ARL2 (ADP ribosylation factor-like protein 2), a small monomeric G protein. ARL2 inhibits the beta-tubulin GTPase activating protein (GAP) activity of TBCD, and its interaction with native tubulin dimers [, ].
Protein
Organism: Mus musculus/domesticus
Length: 352  
Fragment?: true
Protein
Organism: Mus musculus/domesticus
Length: 151  
Fragment?: true
Publication
First Author: Bhamidipati A
Year: 2000
Journal: J Cell Biol
Title: ADP ribosylation factor-like protein 2 (Arl2) regulates the interaction of tubulin-folding cofactor D with native tubulin.
Volume: 149
Issue: 5
Pages: 1087-96
Protein
Organism: Mus musculus/domesticus
Length: 1196  
Fragment?: false
Protein
Organism: Mus musculus/domesticus
Length: 347  
Fragment?: false
Publication
First Author: Dickinson ME
Year: 2016
Journal: Nature
Title: High-throughput discovery of novel developmental phenotypes.
Volume: 537
Issue: 7621
Pages: 508-514
Publication      
First Author: International Knockout Mouse Consortium
Year: 2014
Journal: Database Download
Title: MGI download of modified allele data from IKMC and creation of new knockout alleles
Publication      
First Author: International Mouse Strain Resource
Year: 2014
Journal: Database Download
Title: MGI download of germline transmission data for alleles from IMSR strain data
Publication        
First Author: Cyagen Biosciences Inc.
Year: 2022
Title: Cyagen Biosciences Website.
Publication
First Author: Ko MS
Year: 2000
Journal: Development
Title: Large-scale cDNA analysis reveals phased gene expression patterns during preimplantation mouse development.
Volume: 127
Issue: 8
Pages: 1737-49
Publication        
First Author: Mouse Genome Informatics Scientific Curators
Year: 2002
Title: Mouse Genome Informatics Computational Sequence to Gene Associations for FANTOM2 data
Publication      
First Author: Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen GmbH
Year: 2010
Journal: MGI Direct Data Submission
Title: Alleles produced for the EUCOMM and EUCOMMTools projects by the Helmholtz Zentrum Muenchen GmbH (Hmgu)
Publication        
First Author: Mouse Genome Informatics Scientific Curators
Year: 2002
Title: Function or Process or Component Unknown following Literature Review
Publication        
First Author: GemPharmatech
Year: 2020
Title: GemPharmatech Website.
Publication
First Author: Zambrowicz BP
Year: 2003
Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Title: Wnk1 kinase deficiency lowers blood pressure in mice: a gene-trap screen to identify potential targets for therapeutic intervention.
Volume: 100
Issue: 24
Pages: 14109-14
Publication        
First Author: UniProt-GOA
Year: 2012
Title: Gene Ontology annotation based on UniProtKB/Swiss-Prot keyword mapping
Publication        
First Author: Mouse Genome Informatics Scientific Curators
Year: 2003
Title: MGI Sequence Curation Reference
Publication        
First Author: Mouse Genome Informatics Scientific Curators
Year: 2002
Title: Chromosome assignment of mouse genes using the Mouse Genome Sequencing Consortium (MGSC) assembly and the ENSEMBL Database
Publication
First Author: Gerhard DS
Year: 2004
Journal: Genome Res
Title: The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC).
Volume: 14
Issue: 10B
Pages: 2121-7
Publication        
First Author: MGD Nomenclature Committee
Year: 1995
Title: Nomenclature Committee Use
Publication      
First Author: The Jackson Laboratory Mouse Radiation Hybrid Database
Year: 2004
Journal: Database Release
Title: Mouse T31 Radiation Hybrid Data Load
Publication
First Author: Church DM
Year: 2009
Journal: PLoS Biol
Title: Lineage-specific biology revealed by a finished genome assembly of the mouse.
Volume: 7
Issue: 5
Pages: e1000112