National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Metabolic control of the cell cycle in bacteria
Valtová, Aneta ; Lichá, Irena (advisor) ; Fišer, Radovan (referee)
Metabolic control of cell cycle has been studied for a long time in bacteria, but it is not still fully elucitated. The mechanisms described for several decades have been described in more detail and find new connections between basic metabolism and the cell division process itself. Cell cycle regulation, depending on metabolism and nutritional conditions, takes place over all steps of the cycle. The most mechanisms are studied at the level of bacterial division formation. Nutritional deprivation induces stress responses that use low-molecular substances which are involved in signaling pathways and which regulate the cell cycle. One of the most studying is the molecule of guanosine (penta)tetraphosphate (p)ppGpp, which affects cell cycle at the level of genes expression, at the level of proteins involved in the process of creating divisome, even at the level of replication. Recent research revealed that some enzymes with their already known enzymatic function in major metabolic pathways (glycolysis and TCA), also have a function as sensors that transmit a signal about the nutritional change directly to the division apparatus of the cell. These enzymes regulate the formation of the Z ring through the protein FtsZ or its auxiliary proteins most often and have been found in Gram-positive (Bacillus...
Prokaryotic tubulin homologs
Tomášová, Štěpánka ; Libusová, Lenka (advisor) ; Schwarzerová, Kateřina (referee)
Cytoskeletal proteins form very important structures in eukaryotic cells. It was demonstrated in last years that cytoskeletal proteins are also an important part of prokaryotic cells. One of the cytoskeletal families is the tubulin family. The tubulins are known to form dynamic microtubules which are important for cell division and other processes in eukaryotic cells. Proteins homologous to tubulin were discovered in Prokaryotes, based on their similarity to the tubulin GTP-binding region. This thesis describes the structure and function of known tubulin homologs from bacteria and archaea and compares them to their eukaryotic counterplayers.
Metabolic control of bacterial division.
Valtová, Aneta ; Lichá, Irena (advisor) ; Fišer, Radovan (referee)
Metabolic control of cell cycle has been study for a long time, but it is not completely known. Mechanisms of metabolic control described for a several decade has been explained on molecular level with using a modern methods. Regulation of cell cycle in consideration of metabolism and nutritional status is going on at the several level of cell replication. The most known is about assembly of bacterial cell divisiome. Changes in nutrient availability induce stress response that use low-molecular substances in signaling pathways leading to changes in the cell cycle. One of the most studied is (p)ppGpp that participates in stringent response and affect sigma factors, directly inhibits the initiation of replication by binding to the DnaG primase and indirectly inhibits the elongation of replication. Current researches has revealed that some enzymes with already known enzymatic function in the major metabolic pathways (glycolysis or TCA) also has a function as sensors that transmit the nutritional change signal directly into the cell dividing process. These signals most often inhibits FtsZ protein or affect its helper proteins and subsequent ring formation. Analogues of these enzymes were found in gram-positive (Bacillus subtilis) and gram-negative bacteria (Escherichia coli, Caulobacter crescentus)....

Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.