Clathrin: Difference between revisions

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Clathrin is a [[Protein|protein]] heavily involved in the creation of [[Coated vesicles|coated vesicles]], it also allows for the trafficking inside cell pathways, mechanisms and regulation. It forms a polyhedral (soccer-ball-shaped) lattice made up of many clathrin molecules that coats a new vesicle as it forms and also helps in protein sorting<ref>J.A. Ybe et al., Nature 399 (1999), 371-375.</ref>.<br>Vesicles do not form spontaneously, but rather, are facilitated by coat-proteins like clathrin. Clathrin doesn't bind directly to a membrane to form vesicles; instead, it binds to adaptor proteins that recognize molecules on a membrane surface. At least 20 different clathrin adaptors have been identified, each recognizing and binding to membrane proteins and phospholipids that are unique to a particular organelle<ref>RCSB Molecule of the Month by Graham T. Johnson and David Goodsell (April 2007)</ref>. <br>During vesicle transport, cargo-loaded vesicles form at a donor compartment, with the help of the specialised clathrin coat. It is one of three types of coating. <br>Clathrin-dependent endocytosis is the process by which cells undergo endocytosis by the inward budding of plasma membrane<ref>Trafficking inside cells, pathways, mechanisms and regulation – Nava Segar Springer Lin (c2009) pages 7-9</ref>. <br>
Clathrin is a [[Protein|protein]] heavily involved in the creation of [[Coated vesicles|coated vesicles]], it also allows for the trafficking inside cell pathways, mechanisms and regulation. It forms a polyhedral (soccer-ball-shaped) lattice made up of many clathrin molecules that coats a new vesicle as it forms and also helps in protein sorting<ref>J.A. Ybe et al., Nature 399 (1999), 371-375.</ref>.&nbsp;


Vesicles do not form spontaneously, but rather, are facilitated by coat-proteins like clathrin. Clathrin doesn't bind directly to a membrane to form vesicles; instead, it binds to adaptor proteins that recognize molecules on a membrane surface. At least 20 different clathrin adaptors have been identified, each recognizing and binding to membrane proteins and phospholipids that are unique to a particular [[organelle|organelle]]<ref>RCSB Molecule of the Month by Graham T. Johnson and David Goodsell (April 2007)</ref>.


During vesicle transport, cargo-loaded vesicles form at a donor compartment, with the help of the specialised clathrin coat. It is one of three types of coating.


References  
Clathrin-dependent endocytosis is the process by which cells undergo [[endocytosis|endocytosis]] by the inward budding of plasma membrane<ref>Trafficking inside cells, pathways, mechanisms and regulation – Nava Segar Springer Lin (c2009) pages 7-9</ref>. <br>
 
=== References ===


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Revision as of 04:07, 30 November 2013

Clathrin is a protein heavily involved in the creation of coated vesicles, it also allows for the trafficking inside cell pathways, mechanisms and regulation. It forms a polyhedral (soccer-ball-shaped) lattice made up of many clathrin molecules that coats a new vesicle as it forms and also helps in protein sorting[1]

Vesicles do not form spontaneously, but rather, are facilitated by coat-proteins like clathrin. Clathrin doesn't bind directly to a membrane to form vesicles; instead, it binds to adaptor proteins that recognize molecules on a membrane surface. At least 20 different clathrin adaptors have been identified, each recognizing and binding to membrane proteins and phospholipids that are unique to a particular organelle[2].

During vesicle transport, cargo-loaded vesicles form at a donor compartment, with the help of the specialised clathrin coat. It is one of three types of coating.

Clathrin-dependent endocytosis is the process by which cells undergo endocytosis by the inward budding of plasma membrane[3].

References

  1. J.A. Ybe et al., Nature 399 (1999), 371-375.
  2. RCSB Molecule of the Month by Graham T. Johnson and David Goodsell (April 2007)
  3. Trafficking inside cells, pathways, mechanisms and regulation – Nava Segar Springer Lin (c2009) pages 7-9