Roles of Cross-Membrane Transport and Signaling in the Maintenance of Cellular Homeostasis

被引:0
|
作者
Inchul Cho
Mark R. Jackson
Joe Swift
机构
[1] University of Manchester,Wellcome Trust Centre for Cell
来源
关键词
Plasma membrane; Endoplasmic reticulum; Nuclear envelope; Nuclear pore complex; LINC complex; Nuclear lamina; Mechanotransduction; Molecular chaperone; Stress response;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Organelles allow specialized functions within cells to be localized, contained and independently regulated. This separation is oftentimes achieved by selectively permeable membranes, which enable control of molecular transport, signaling between compartments and containment of stress-inducing factors. Here we consider the role of a number of membrane systems within the cell: the plasma membrane, that of the endoplasmic reticulum, and then focusing on the nucleus, depository for chromatin and regulatory centre of the cell. Nuclear pores allow shuttling of ions, metabolites, proteins and mRNA to and from the nucleus. The activity of transcription factors and signaling molecules is also modulated by translocation across the nuclear envelope. Many of these processes require ‘active transportation’ against a concentration gradient and may be regulated by the nuclear pores, Ran-GTP activity and the nuclear lamina. Cells must respond to a combination of biochemical and physical inputs and we discuss too how mechanical signals are carried from outside the cell into the nucleus through integrins, the cytoskeleton and the ‘linker of nucleo- and cyto-skeletal’ (LINC) complex which spans the nuclear envelope. Regulation and response to signals and stresses, both internal and external, allow cells to maintain homeostasis within functional tissue.
引用
收藏
页码:234 / 246
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Roles of Cross-Membrane Transport and Signaling in the Maintenance of Cellular Homeostasis
    Cho, Inchul
    Jackson, Mark R.
    Swift, Joe
    CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR BIOENGINEERING, 2016, 9 (02) : 234 - 246
  • [2] Vasodilation by S-nitrosothiols: Mechanisms for Cross-Membrane Signaling
    Liu, Taiming
    Schroeder, Hobe J.
    Power, Gordon G.
    Wilson, Sean M.
    Blood, Arlin B.
    FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2013, 65 : S101 - S101
  • [3] A new synthetic capsules may aid cross-membrane ion transport
    Gross, M
    CHEMISTRY WORLD, 2004, 1 (11): : 18 - 18
  • [4] Mechanisms for cross-membrane vasodilatory signaling of nitrosothiols in isolated sheep femoral arteries
    Liu, Taiming
    Schroeder, Hobe J.
    Power, Gordon G.
    Wilson, Sean M.
    Blood, Arlin B.
    NITRIC OXIDE-BIOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY, 2013, 31 : S29 - S30
  • [5] Formation of pore-spanning lipid membrane and cross-membrane water and ion transport
    Ronen, Rona
    Kaufman, Yair
    Freger, Viatcheslav
    JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE, 2017, 523 : 247 - 254
  • [6] MEMBRANE-TRANSPORT IN THE CELLULAR HOMEOSTASIS OF CALCIUM
    CARAFOLI, E
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR PHARMACOLOGY, 1986, 8 : S3 - S6
  • [7] Enzyme catalyzes cross-membrane reaction
    Borman, Stu
    CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2018, 96 (22) : 7 - 7
  • [8] Chiral specificity of novel platinum complexes in their cross-membrane transport and DNA molecular recognition
    Yang, M
    Hu, QY
    Zhang, LR
    Zhu, SM
    Zou, J
    Li, RC
    Wang, K
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY-SUID-AFRIKAANSE TYDSKRIF VIR CHEMIE, 1997, 50 (04): : 227 - 231
  • [9] A lumen-tunable triangular DNA nanopore for molecular sensing and cross-membrane transport
    Liu, Xiaoming
    Liu, Fengyu
    Chhabra, Hemani
    Maffeo, Christopher
    Chen, Zhuo
    Huang, Qiang
    Aksimentiev, Aleksei
    Arai, Tatsuo
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2024, 15 (01)
  • [10] Elucidating the functional roles of spatial organization in cross-membrane signal transduction by a hybrid simulation method
    Wu, Yinghao
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2017, 253