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      A new paradigm for membrane-organizing and -shaping scaffolds.

      Febs Letters
      Animals, Caveolins, metabolism, Cell Membrane, chemistry, Disease, Membrane Proteins, Nerve Tissue Proteins

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          Abstract

          The clathrin, COPI and COPII scaffolds are paradigm vesicle coats in membrane trafficking. Recent advances in our understanding of the caveolar coat have generated a new paradigm. It represents those membrane coats, where a considerable part of the protein component is lipid modified, and integrated into the cytosolic leaflet of the vesicle membrane by a hairpin-like hydrophobic structure. Such coat proteins are permanently associated with membranes, and form oligomers early after synthesis. These oligomers assemble into a coat that has high affinity for particular lipids, creating lipid microdomains within the membrane. The combined protein-lipid structure should be considered as the scaffold that entraps ligands, either through affinity with the protein or with the lipid component, and that has the ability to shape membranes. Besides scaffolds assembled by caveolins, scaffolds assembled by reticulons and PHB domain-containing proteins such as the reggie/flotillin proteins fit this paradigm.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          16996501
          10.1016/j.febslet.2006.08.077

          Chemistry
          Animals,Caveolins,metabolism,Cell Membrane,chemistry,Disease,Membrane Proteins,Nerve Tissue Proteins
          Chemistry
          Animals, Caveolins, metabolism, Cell Membrane, chemistry, Disease, Membrane Proteins, Nerve Tissue Proteins

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