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Molecular mechanisms of signal transduction by the ERK signaling cascade.
Bráborec, Vojtěch ; Rösel, Daniel (referee) ; Vomastek, Tomáš (advisor)
The MAPK (mitogen-activated protein kinase) cascade represents an evolutionary conserved mechanism by which cells sense extracellular signals and convert them into variety of context-dependent responses. The best studied member of the MAPK protein family is protein kinase ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase). Together with protein kinases Raf and MEK (MAPK/ERK kinase) comprise a prototypical signaling pathway which regulates broad-spectrum of biological processes such as cellular proliferation, differentiation, cellular migration, adhesion or apoptosis. To modulate such a multitude of distinct responses by a single pathway, cells utilize mechanisms such as signal strength and duration, distinct protein localization, communication with other signaling pathways, differential substrate selection and the selection of interactive partners. All presented means of regulation are influenced by proteins with non-enzymatic functions - scaffold proteins, protein inhibitors and anchoring proteins. These protein modulators channel the signals leading to particular cellular response, and thus represent the key element of signal transduction. Despite increasing importance of protein modulators in cellular signaling, their biological roles remain mostly unknown. The physiological importance of protein modulators is...

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