Week 13: Intracellular Compartments & Protein Sorting
Week 14: Intracellular Compartments & Protein Sorting II

Week 15: Intracellular Membrane Traffic
Potluck
100

The part of a protein responsible for directing it to the correct compartment

 What is a signal sequence?

100

Adding two fatty acids to serine produces this important lipid.

What is ceramide?

100

General term for the process that involves the fusion of vesicles with the plasma membrane to release intracellular components to the extracellular environment.

What is exocytosis?

100

Both the concentration gradient and membrane potential form this to influence ion transport across a membrane.

 What is the electrochemical gradient?

200

The organelle that imports proteins co-transitionally

What is the ER?

200

The nuclear side of this has fibrils forming a basket shape

What is a nuclear pore?

200

Member of a protein family of GTPase that are important for the regulation of membrane traffic, both endocytic and exocytic.

What are RAB proteins?

200

This protein assembles around the neck of a budding vesicle and uses GTPase to make the final cut.

What is dynamin?

300

A Multi-subunit protein assembly that transports proteins across the mitochondrial outer membrane?

What is the TOM complex?

300

Combining two fatty acids and glycerol-3-phosphate using acetyl-CoA and acyl transferase produces this compound.

What is phosphatidic acid?

300

The type of transport that is exemplified by transport from the Golgi to the ER

What is Anterograde transport?

300

A new compartment can be made when double-membrane sheets enclose cytosolic constituents using this form of compartmentalization.

What is engulfment?

400

The way that nascent polypeptide chains are transferred across the ER membrane.

What is a pore in the SEC61 protein translocator complex?

400

This organelle is thought to have once done all oxidative activity in the cell, before the mitochondria was introduced.

What is a peroxisome?

400

The orientation of glycoproteins and glycolipids in intracellular membranes.

What is their oligosaccharide chains facing the lumenal side?

400

When these two proteins of similar name interact, they are able to pull membranes close enough together to fuse.

What are v-SNARE and t-SNARE?

500

The orientation of the N-terminus and the C-terminus in the class of single-pass transmembrane proteins that have a single internal hydrophobic sequence that functions as both an ER signal sequence and membrane anchor sequence.

What is the C-terminus on the luminal face and N-terminus on the cytostolic face?

500

Sections rich in these repeats form “gates” within nuclear pores.

What are FG (phenylalanine-glycine) repeats?

500

In events involving the fusion of a vesicle to a target membrane this happens to the cytosolic leaflets of vesicles and target bilayers.

What is the cytosolic leaflets of the two membrane bilayers come into contact and fuse, than followed by the noncytosolic leaflets?

500

A combination of 3 heavy and 3 light chains form a triskelion which is part of this type of vesicular coat.

 What is clathrin?

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