1. Some lessons from the tissue transglutaminase knockout mouse
- Author
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Zsolt Sarang, Boglarka Toth, Éva Garabuczi, Zoltán Balajthy, Krisztina Köröskényi, Zsuzsa Szondy, and László Fésüs
- Subjects
Tissue transglutaminase ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Cell ,Context (language use) ,Biology ,Proteomics ,Biochemistry ,Mice ,GTP-Binding Proteins ,medicine ,Animals ,Protein Glutamine gamma Glutamyltransferase 2 ,Elméleti orvostudományok ,Cell adhesion ,Cytoskeleton ,Conserved Sequence ,Mice, Knockout ,Transglutaminases ,Organic Chemistry ,Orvostudományok ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Acyltransferase ,Knockout mouse ,biology.protein - Abstract
Transglutaminase 2 (TG2) is an inducible transamidating acyltransferase that catalyzes Ca(2+)-dependent protein modifications. It acts as a G protein in transmembrane signaling and as a cell surface adhesion mediator, this distinguishes it from other members of the transglutaminase family. The sequence motifs and domains revealed in the TG2 structure, can each be assigned distinct cellular functions, including the regulation of cytoskeleton, cell adhesion, and cell death. Though many biological functions of the enzyme have already been described or proposed previously, studies of TG2 null mice by our laboratory during the past years revealed several novel in vivo roles of the protein. In this review we will discuss these novel roles in their biological context.
- Published
- 2008
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