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SPP 1710:  Dynamics of Thiol-Based Redox Switches in Cellular Physiology

Subject Area Biology
Term from 2014 to 2023
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 237042534
 
In recent years it has become evident that reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, despite their traditional reputation as components of radical chains and harbingers of damage, act as physiologically essential messengers in signal transduction. The signalling properties of particular oxidants are primarily sensed and mediated by "protein thiol switches", which are protein thiols that are specifically and reversibly modified by oxidation, thereby switching the protein between different conformational and functional states. In spite of the fundamental cell biological and medical importance of thiol switches we are only beginning to understand their principles of specificity, their mechanism of action and their role in the spatio-temporal operation of signal transduction.
Based on this new perception and recent pioneering technical developments, an interdisciplinary consortium of more than 30 scientists joined forces within the Priority Programme to synergistically address the following fundamental questions in the field of redox signalling and thiol-based redox regulation:
(1) What are the molecular mechanisms underlying protein thiol switches, and how can we explain their specificity and efficiency?
(2) Which redox signalling events and thiol switch changes do occur in the living organism and what are the species-specific differences?
(3) What are the physiological roles of redox signals within the overall cellular signalling circuitry and decision-making?
In order to adequately address these questions, novel interdisciplinary concepts and approaches will be combined with stringent technological advancement. We plan to clarify the precise biochemistry of the events under study. We plan to obtain high-resolution structural, functional, quantitative and spatio-temporal information on in vivo redox events and their dynamics. And we plan to identify, monitor and specifically manipulate individual thiol switches in vivo.
Within the Priority Programme, expertise, chosen experimental approaches and technology is exchanged and made available in a highly synergistic way aiming to cross the borders between disciplines, between subcellular compartments, between thiol switch proteins of interest and between model organisms - ranging from bacteria, protozoa, yeast and plants to mammals. The Priority Programme comprises individual groups and projects approaching the joint interest in thiol switches from different angles.
DFG Programme Priority Programmes
International Connection Netherlands, USA

Projects

Spokespersons Professorin Dr. Katja Becker, from 2/2014 until 12/2019; Professor Dr. Tobias Dick, since 1/2020
 
 

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