National Repository of Grey Literature 4 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Proposal for Project and Application of Project Management Methodology in the Company
Markulchak, Alina ; Doskočil, Radek (referee) ; Smolíková, Lenka (advisor)
Ths bhlr thss s fusd n prjt mngmnt n n th sltd mpny. Th frst prt f th thss dsrbs th thrtl knwldg f prjt mngmnt. Th snd nlytl prt s dvtd t th bs nfrmtn but th mpny nd th nlyss f th urrnt stutn n th mpny. Th lst prt f wrk nluds suggstns fr hngs n th mpny nd dsrbs th bnfts f ths hngs.
Regulation of epithelial plasticity by ERK1 and ERK2 isoforms
Rasl, Jan ; Vomastek, Tomáš (advisor) ; Rösel, Daniel (referee) ; Libusová, Lenka (referee)
The ERK pathway is an evolutionarily conserved three-tier signaling cascade comprised of protein kinases Raf, MEK, and ERK. These core kinases are arranged in a hierarchical order and the signal is transduced from Raf to MEK to ERK. The ERK pathway is activated by diverse extracellular signals and in response regulates many cellular processes including cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, migration or epithelial plasticity. Given the role of the ERK pathway in regulating such fundamental cellular processes, the ERK pathway signaling is tightly controlled and its dysregulation has pathological consequences such as cancer development and progression. Although much is known about mechanisms underlying the signal transduction by the ERK signaling pathway, much less is known about how two highly homologous ERK1 and ERK2 isoforms contribute to the signaling by this pathway. In this thesis, I studied isoform-specific functions of ERK1 and ERK2 using epithelial Madin- Darby Canine Kidney (MDCK) cells overexpressing either ERK1 or ERK2. Obtained data show that overexpression of ERK2, but not ERK1, had significant effects on the morphology and functional phenotype of MDCK cells. Both ERK1 and ERK2 expressing cells were able to form cohesive clusters, but the only ERK2 overexpression affected...
Proposal for Project and Application of Project Management Methodology in the Company
Markulchak, Alina ; Doskočil, Radek (referee) ; Smolíková, Lenka (advisor)
Ths bhlr thss s fusd n prjt mngmnt n n th sltd mpny. Th frst prt f th thss dsrbs th thrtl knwldg f prjt mngmnt. Th snd nlytl prt s dvtd t th bs nfrmtn but th mpny nd th nlyss f th urrnt stutn n th mpny. Th lst prt f wrk nluds suggstns fr hngs n th mpny nd dsrbs th bnfts f ths hngs.
The regulation of the ERK signalling pathway by scaffold protein RACK1
Bráborec, Vojtěch ; Vomastek, Tomáš (advisor) ; Filipp, Dominik (referee)
The ERK signalling cascade comprised of protein kinases Raf, MEK and ERK is an evolutionarily conserved member of MAPK family that is activated in response to wide range of extracellular stimuli. The ERK pathway controls fundamental cellular functions including cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis or cell motility. To control such a diverse cellular responses by a single pathway cells have evolved regulatory mechanisms that channel the extracellular signals towards the specific biological response. Crucial to this control are non- enzymatic proteins termed scaffolds that associate with and enhance functional interaction of the components of MAPK pathways and can regulate amplitude, timing, specificity and location of signals. Scaffold protein RACK1 associates with several components of cell migration machinery including integrins, FAK, Src and the ERK pathway core protein kinases. RACK1 regulates distinct steps of cell migration such as establishment of cell polarity and focal adhesion turnover, however, the molecular mechanism by which RACK1 regulates these processes remains largely unknown. The main aim of this study was to investigate the functional role of RACK1 in cell motility, in particular to identify new effector proteins utilized by the ERK pathway and RACK1 in the regulation of...

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