Bacterial and archaeal cytoskeletons.

Yue Liu,Jan Löwe

CURRENT BIOLOGY(2021)

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摘要
All living cells depend on the intricate organization of molecular components in space and time. Although this notion was historically based on eukaryotic cells, with their structured intracellular architecture and cellular morphologies, it is now recognized that prokaryotes (that is, bacteria and archaea) also possess complex structures. A cytoskeleton is a network of intracellular protein filaments that play a structural or mechanical role (such as scaffolding, pushing, or pulling) in the spatiotemporal organization of cellular processes. Polymerization of protein monomers in a roughly linear fashion into filaments represents an effective means to establish long-range spatial order by bridging the gap between nanometer-sized molecules and micron-sized cells. It is now evident that bacteria and archaea possess numerous kinds of cytoskeletal proteins, including prokaryotic homologues of the eukaryotic actins, tubulins, and intermediate filaments, as well as other types that have been found primarily or exclusively in prokaryotes (Table 1). Understanding the diverse functions and mechanisms of the rapidly growing universe of prokaryotic cytoskeletal proteins will not only advance prokaryotic cell biology and reveal evolutionary principles, but also open up new avenues for the development of anti-microbial agents, de novo protein design, and the construction of minimal and synthetic cells.
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关键词
parm,tubulin,cell division,mreb,actin
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