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SFB 594:  Molecular Machines in Protein Folding and Protein Transport

Subject Area Biology
Medicine
Term from 2001 to 2012
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 5484884
 
Molecular machines perform complex multi-step operations on a molecular level and by that produce, degrade, or reconfigure molecular substrates in a variety of ways. They are themselves complex structures consisting of a number of subunits. The aim of this collaborative research centre is to elucidate the basic structures and mechanisms of molecular machines which influence a protein’s folding state and thereby control further reactions: de novo protein folding, refolding of stress denatured proteins, degradation, and protein translocation. Proteins depend on helper proteins (chaperones) in order to adopt their correct folding state; the degradation of native proteins requires ATPases for unfolding; and translocation of proteins is mediated by complex translocases. One focus is on chaperone-mediated folding of proteins (GroEL/GroES, Hsp90), disintegration of protein aggregates (Hsp104, Hsp70/Hsp40), the archaeal chaperone VAT, and small heat shock proteins (Hsp12, Hsp26, Hsp42). Furthermore, the molecular mechanisms of the ATPase ISWI in altering chromatin structure and of complex proteases (20S Proteasome, HsIV/HSIU) are addressed. Another focus is to study molecular machines which transport proteins across membranes. It is planned to investigate the structural and molecular mechanisms of protein translocase complexes of bacteria (SecYEG, and Typ III protein secretion system), mitochondria (TOM, TIM22, TIM23, and OXA), and of chloroplasts (TOC, TIC and Albino 3).
DFG Programme Collaborative Research Centres

Completed projects

Participating University Technische Universität München (TUM)
Participating Institution Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie (MPIB)
 
 

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