Seminar
Fibril Assembly and Single Molecule Mechanics of a Multidomain Protein
Professor Viola VogelCenter of Nanotechnology and Department of Bioengineering
University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Monday, November 8, 1999
3:00 pm
3269 Beckman Institute
Abstract
Many proteins, including prions and fibronectin, have physiological
characteristics in the aggregated state that are greatly different
from those of their non-aggregated and water soluble counterparts.
Nature evolved a series of mechanisms to control and regulate
molecular recognition processes. These include conformational
changes induced by ligand binding, or the burial of recognition sites
through intra- or intermolecular self-assembly. Understanding how
alterations of the functional states of proteins are regulated
through molecular assembly is particularly interesting for large
multidomain proteins that carry multiple recognition sites. The
model protein discussed here will be fibronectin, which mediates cell
adhesion to surfaces. We found that the application of mechanical
force is crucial to facilitate its assembly into fibers, as well as
to
regulate the accessibility of its cell binding site.
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Tea and coffee will be served in R3151 Beckman Institute at 2:15
pm and you will have this opportunity to meet the speaker.