National Repository of Grey Literature 5 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Molecular mechanisms of the assembly and function of BBSome
Prasai, Avishek ; Huranová, Martina (advisor) ; Varga, Vladimír (referee) ; Bosáková, Michaela (referee)
Bardet Biedl syndrome is a genetic disorder caused by the dysfunction of the BBSome, an octameric cargo adaptor protein complex. The BBSome facilitates the transport of signaling receptors into and out of the primary cilium, a microtubule based sensory organelle of the cell. The first part of this thesis focuses on the elucidation of the assembly of the BBSome in living cells. We generated a library of human and mouse cells lines deficient in the individual BBSome subunits and transduced them with the other YFP tagged subunits. We employed biochemical assays, immunofluorescence and quantitative fluorescence microscopy techniques to analyze the individual steps in the BBSome assembly pathway. We revealed that the BBSome assembly occurs sequentially in spatially regulated steps. We showed that BBS4 nucleates the assembly of a pre-BBSome at the pericentriolar satellites. The translocation of the pre-BBSome to the ciliary base is facilitated by BBS1. We also revealed that in a BBS chaperonin deficient cell line, BBS12 KO cells, a small fraction of the BBSome and/or BBSome sub-complexes are still able to form and localize to the cilium. This could suggest that the BBS chaperonins might act later in the BBSome assembly pathway providing a means for quality control for the BBSome. Ciliary ectocytosis...
The role of cell polarity signaling in the plasticity of cancer cell invasiveness
Gandalovičová, Aneta ; Brábek, Jan (advisor) ; Cvrčková, Fatima (referee)
Throughout the last few years cancer research has focused on studying the origin of secondary tumors, i.e. metastases, which are a direct outcome of the ability of cancer cells to disseminate from the primary tumor and invade the adjacent tissue. Generally, cancer cells migrate by two distinct mechanisms- amoeboid or mesenchymal. Whereas the mesenchymal migration mode can be described as "path generating", the amoeboid mode resembles a "path finding" way of migration. Both types of invasion are regulated by divergent signaling pathways that are closely related to cell polarity and cytoskeleton reorganization. Responsible for cell polarization are not only the polarity complexes Par, Scribble and Crumbs, but also phosphoinositides and Rho GTPases Rac, Rho and Cdc42, which, additionally, regulate the dynamics of the cytoskeleton. By a mutual interplay they regulate cell motility. It cannot come as a surprise that their deregulation commonly results in tumorigenesis. A more thorough comprehension of the signaling pathways leading to cancer cell invasiveness is a necessary step towards understanding the complex problem of metastasis. Key words: invasiveness, amoeboid, mesenchymal, cell polarity, motility, Rho GTPases, polarity complexes
The plasticity of melanoma cell invasiveness
Gandalovičová, Aneta ; Brábek, Jan (advisor) ; Truksa, Jaroslav (referee)
and keywords: During metastasis, cancer cells can invade the extracellular matrix using various strategies. When invading individually, they employ either the amoeboid invasion mode, during which the cell body dynamically deforms by enhanced contractility to squeeze through pores within the matrix, or protease dependent mesenchymal migration that takes advantage of the possibility to digest the surrounding matrix. Cells migrating in one mode can actively switch to the other by mesenchymal-amoeboid (MAT) or amoeboid-mesenchymal transitions (AMT). This enables escape mechanisms and considerably complicates anti-metastatic treatment. It is well known that Rho GTPases are master regulators of cytoskeleton re-arrangements and thus, unsurprisingly, play a major role in both invasion modes and can directly drive the transitions. However, upstream activation of these pathways is still largely unclear. This thesis aimed to optimize 3D conditions suitable for studying plasticity of cell invasion in vitro, establish AMT and MAT in melanoma cells based on manipulation of Rho GTPases and verify novel candidates regulating cell invasion plasticity based on previous RNA sequencing of cells before and after MAT. Last, by synthesis of published data, results from sequencing and new findings presented in this...
The role of cell polarity signaling in the plasticity of cancer cell invasiveness
Gandalovičová, Aneta ; Brábek, Jan (advisor) ; Cvrčková, Fatima (referee)
Throughout the last few years cancer research has focused on studying the origin of secondary tumors, i.e. metastases, which are a direct outcome of the ability of cancer cells to disseminate from the primary tumor and invade the adjacent tissue. Generally, cancer cells migrate by two distinct mechanisms- amoeboid or mesenchymal. Whereas the mesenchymal migration mode can be described as "path generating", the amoeboid mode resembles a "path finding" way of migration. Both types of invasion are regulated by divergent signaling pathways that are closely related to cell polarity and cytoskeleton reorganization. Responsible for cell polarization are not only the polarity complexes Par, Scribble and Crumbs, but also phosphoinositides and Rho GTPases Rac, Rho and Cdc42, which, additionally, regulate the dynamics of the cytoskeleton. By a mutual interplay they regulate cell motility. It cannot come as a surprise that their deregulation commonly results in tumorigenesis. A more thorough comprehension of the signaling pathways leading to cancer cell invasiveness is a necessary step towards understanding the complex problem of metastasis. Key words: invasiveness, amoeboid, mesenchymal, cell polarity, motility, Rho GTPases, polarity complexes
The role of proto-oncogene crk in invasiveness
Tomášová, Lea ; Rösel, Daniel (advisor) ; Ševčík, Jan (referee)
Proto-oncogene Crk was identified as an oncogenic product of an avian retrovirus in 1988. It is an adaptor protein containing SH2 and SH3 binding domains. Thanks to these domains Crk facilitates protein-protein interactions and therefore plays a crucial role in signal transduction. Crk forms signal complexes with several proteins and hence impacts many cellular processes, among them cell migration, tumorigenezis and invasion of the surrounding tissues. The increased invasiveness allows the tumour cells to detach from the primary tumour and form metastasis which is very problematic feature of cancer. Overexpression of Crk was observed in several tumour tissues, it correlates with an aggressive and metastatic phenotype of the tumours. The subject of this thesis is to describe the mechanisms of how Crk can regulate cellular motility and invasiveness.

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