Intermediate Filaments Flashcards

1
Q

rules for filaments

A

must be dynamic, flexible, and strong

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2
Q

intermediate filaments

A

coiled-coil proteins with no polarity; stronger and more flexible than MTs and actin

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3
Q

vimentin

A

endothelial cell IFs

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4
Q

keratin

A

epithelial cell IFs

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5
Q

desmin

A

muscle IFs

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6
Q

neurofilaments

A

nerve cell IFs

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7
Q

IF structure

A

globular amino and carboxy terminals with a central alpha helical rod domain; coiled coil dimers

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8
Q

transglutamination of IFs

A

toughens keratins in hair, skin, and nails

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9
Q

phosphorylation of IFs

A

lamins are phosphorylated by a PK in prophase for disassembly before cell cycle

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10
Q

dephosphorylation of IFs

A

lamins are dephosphorylated for reassembly in telophase

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11
Q

keratin filament

A

need both type I and type II

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12
Q

epidermolysis bullosa simplex

A

mutations in keratins at basal layer

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13
Q

epidermolytic hyperkeratosis

A

mutations in keratins in spinous layer above basal layer

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14
Q

EBS mutants

A

disrupt cytokeratin interactions with desmosomes and hemidesmosomes

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15
Q

muscle IF diseases

A

mutations in desmin gene in muscles

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16
Q

desminopathies

A

can be due to mutation in desmin gene or the desmin chaperone; wide range of clinical presentations; autosomal dominant

17
Q

nuclear lamin

A

make up structural meshwork under nuclear membrane

18
Q

A lamins

A

one gene LMNA makes two different proteins (A and C) by alternative splicing; expressed in late development

19
Q

B lamins

A

two related genes - LMNB1, LMNB2 that are expressed throughout development

20
Q

formation of lamin A vs. B

A

WT with CAAX box at carboxy end –> farnesylation –> C-terminal cleavage –> methylation –> lamin A is cleaved upstream while lamin B keeps the methylation

21
Q

laminopathies

A

defects in LMNA; muscular dystrophies, lipodystrophies, peripheral neuropathy syndromes, and progeria

22
Q

muscular dystrophies

A

lamins do not perform properly leading to misshapen nucleus; mutation in coiled coil domain (can develop late in life)

23
Q

lipodystrophies

A

defects are found in IG tail which causes target destruction –> altered gene expression

24
Q

progeria mutation

A

point mutation (C to T) changes a splice site near last exon, causing loss of around 50 amino acids

25
Q

How does new splice site cause progeria?

A

in processing of lamin A, upstream cleavage after methylation is prevented because of new splice site –> causes accumulation of progerin (prelamin a)