See also: Goldenseal Golfing Geologist Golden Googling Golgi Goldsmith Golgotha
1. Golgins are a family of coiled-coil proteins associated with the Golgi apparatus necessary for tethering events in membrane fusion and as structural supports for Golgi cisternae.
Golgins, Golgi
2. Muschalik and Munro introduce Golgins and their roles as vesicle tethers and scaffolds at the Golgi
Golgins, Golgi
3. Golgins are a diverse family of Golgi-localized coiled-coil proteins and interact with Golgi membranes in a variety of different ways
Golgins, Golgi
4. What does Golgins mean? Plural form of golgin
Golgins, Golgin
5. Short B, Haas A, Barr FA (2005) Golgins and GTPases, giving identity and structure to the Golgi apparatus
Golgins, Gtpases, Giving, Golgi
6. Muschalik and Munro introduce Golgins and their roles as vesicle tethers and scaffolds at the Golgi.
Golgins, Golgi
7. Golgins: coiled-coil-rich proteins associated with the Golgi complex
Golgins, Golgi
8. Golgins are sufficient to capture specific classes of vesicle
Golgins
9. We hypothesized that if the Golgins tether vesicles destined for the Golgi, then their relocation to mitochondria should result in
Golgins, Golgi
10. Golgins The Golgins constitute a diverse group of Golgi associated proteins that play a role in Golgi stacking, vesicle tethering, and constitution of the Golgi matrix (Short et al
Golgins, Group, Golgi
11. 2005). Golgins are characterized by an extended coiled-coil region that mediates homodimerization.
Golgins
12. The Golgins are a family of proteins, of which the protein encoded by this gene is a member, that are localized to the Golgi
Golgins, Gene, Golgi
13. Golgins are long peripheral or membrane‐integral coiled‐coil domain‐containing proteins that exhibit selectivity toward their respective carrier subtypes, which has been demonstrated by experiments showing a selective accumulation of carriers following the artificial relocation of particular Golgins to mitochondria [ [ 5] ].
Golgins
14. Golgins are a family of coiled‐coil proteins located at the cytoplasmic surface of the Golgi apparatus and have been implicated in maintaining Golgi structural integrity through acting as tethering factors for retrograde vesicle transport.
Golgins, Golgi
15. Staging experiments reveal that the linking of Golgins precedes SNAREpin assembly
Golgins
16. Thus, p115 coordinates sequential tethering and docking of COPI vesicles by first using long tethers (Golgins) and then short tethers (SNAREs).
Golgins
17. Golgins are recruited to different parts of the Golgi stack by their C-termini, which have either a transmembrane domain (TMD) or a domain that binds to a Golgi-localized GTPase such as Arl1 or Rab6
Golgins, Golgi, Gtpase
18. However, for most of the Golgins, it is unclear which part of these long proteins interacts with the vesicle and how they are binding with the
Golgins
19. The Golgins are a family of predominantly coiled-coil proteins that are localized to the Golgi apparatus
Golgins, Golgi
20. Golgins are present in all eukaryotes, suggesting an evolutionary conserved function.
Golgins
21. The Golgins, a large and ancient family of ubiquitously expressed long coiled-coil proteins of the Golgi apparatus, function as tethers that contribute to the specificity of membrane traffic by
Golgins, Golgi
22. This review focuses on Golgins, a protein family containing long coiled‐coil regions, summarizes their known functions in animal cells and highlights recent findings about plant Golgins and their putative roles in the plant secretory pathway
Golgins
23. Golgins help maintain the structure of a cell component called the Golgi apparatus, in which newly produced proteins are modified so they can carry out their functions
Golgins, Golgi
24. Golgins are a family of Golgi-localized long coiled-coil proteins
Golgins, Golgi
25. Several types of proteins have been proposed to confer specificity to this process, and we have recently shown that a set of coiled-coil proteins on the Golgi, called Golgins, are able to capture specific classes of carriers when
Golgi, Golgins
26. Trans-Golgins participate in bcd localization and gradient formation
Golgins, Gradient
27. The Drosophila genome contains four prominent trans-Golgin genes identified as dGCC88, dGolgin97 (also called centrosome’s beautiful sister (cbs)), dGCC185 and dGolgin245, which are structurally well conserved compared to their vertebrate counterparts [].We considered if trans-Golgins were involved in bcd …
Genome, Golgin, Genes, Golgins
28. Golgins such as GM130/golgin-95 and p115 were found to be components of this matrix, and, together with their predicted elongated structure, this was interpreted as evidence that Golgins function in the maintenance and 405 www.current-opinion.com Current Opinion in Cell Biology 2003, 15:405–413
Golgins, Golgin
29. Golgins are coiled-coil proteins that participate in membrane-tethering events at the Golgi complex
Golgins, Golgi
30. However, the degree to which individual Golgins contribute to these processes is …
Golgins
31. Several Golgins, including golgin-160, are substrates for caspase cleavage during programmed cell death (apoptosis)
Golgins, Golgin
32. The Golgins are a family of proteins, of which the protein encoded by this gene is a member, that are localized to the Golgi
Golgins, Gene, Golgi
33. Wong and Munro (2014) selected 10 mammalian Golgins that are conserved outside of vertebrates and found on different regions of the Golgi and ectopically expressed them at the mitochondria through attachment to a mitochondrial transmembrane domain in place of their C-terminal Golgi targeting domain
Golgins, Golgi
34. Pairs of Golgins overexpressed in the same cell form distinct juxtaposed condensates
Golgins
35. The compassionate, hard-working, democratic population of 663 million Golgins enjoy a sensible mix of personal and economic freedoms, while the political process is open and the people's right to vote held sacrosanct
Golgins
36. Golgins are large coiled-coil proteins that play a role in Golgi structure and vesicle traffic
Golgins, Golgi
37. The Arf-like GTPase Arl1 regulates the translocation of GRIP domain-containing Golgins to Golgi membranes
Gtpase, Grip, Golgins, Golgi
38. The Golgins surround the Golgi in an array of loosely associated tentacles
Golgins, Golgi
39. Golgin-specific interactions anchor the proteins via their carboxyl termini to particular parts of the Golgi, but the different Golgins share at least some binding partners.
Golgin, Golgi, Golgins
40. They are interested in the contribution of the lipid bilayer to targeting of transmembrane Golgi proteins, and in the function of a group of peripheral Golgi membrane proteins called Golgins
Golgi, Group, Golgins
41. The Golgins, Giantin on COPI vesicles, to GM130 on Golgi membranes
Golgins, Giantin, Golgi
42. Golgins are large coiled-coil proteins that play a role in tethering of vesicles to Golgi membranes and in maintaining the overall structure of the Golgi apparatus
Golgins, Golgi
43. Six Arabidopsis proteins with the structural characteristics of Golgins were isolated and shown to …
Golgins
44. Golgins are coiled-coil proteins that play a key role in the regulation of Golgi architecture and function
Golgins, Golgi
45. The Golgins are a family of proteins, of which the protein encoded by this gene is a member, that are localized to the Golgi
Golgins, Gene, Golgi
46. Golgins are coiled-coil proteins that play prominent roles in maintaining the structure and function of the Golgi complex
Golgins, Golgi
47. Several Golgins, including golgin-160, are substrates for caspase cleavage during programmed cell death (apoptosis)
Golgins, Golgin
48. In GM130-nKO mice, the levels of the Golgins studied were unaffected (Fig
Golgins
GOLGINS