Biological complexity: building celllular microtubules (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Thursday, February 11, 2016, 20:40 (3208 days ago) @ David Turell

Led by an enzyme:-http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/02/160211085202.htm-"Professor Rob Cross, Professor of Mechanochemical Cell Biology at Warwick Medical School, said: "Every cell in our bodies contains a railway network, a system of tiny tracks called microtubules that run between important destinations inside the cell and allow cargo to be carried from one place to another. The tracks of this cellular railway are almost unimaginably small -- just 25 nanometers across (a nanometer is a millionth of a millimeter). The railway is just as crucial to a well-run cell as a full-size railway is to a well-run country."-"The microtubule tracks are vital for functions such as cell division and are a key target for key cancer drugs. The Cross lab is researching how these microtubule tracks are assembled.-"Professor Cross said: "It has been known for some time that a team of proteins called TOGs sits on the tip of the growing microtubule track and works like a team of tiny railway workers to rapidly lay the new microtubule track. But exactly how this team works so effectively has been mysterious."-"In their new work the Cross lab shows that TOGs are held in place at microtubule tips by other proteins called TACCs, and that the TOG-TACC machinery then stabilises the growing microtubule track as well as speeding up the assembly of the new track.-"The tip-tracking TOG-TACC machinery acts as a catalyst of microtubule assembly, and it turns out, based on the new results, that TOG-TACC is a very unusual type of catalyst that stabilises its product (the microtubule railway) as well as speeding up its growth."-Comment: Enzymes are giant molecules that run processes. How did chance evolution find this one?


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