Publications by authors named "Larisa Volceanov"

Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular human pathogen that grows inside a membranous, cytosolic vacuole termed an inclusion. Septins are a group of 13 GTP-binding proteins that assemble into oligomeric complexes and that can form higher-order filaments. We report here that the septins SEPT2, -9, -11, and probably -7 form fibrillar structures around the chlamydial inclusion.

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Chlamydia grows inside a cytosolic vacuole (the inclusion) that is supplied with nutrients by the host through vesicular and non-vesicular transport. It is unclear in many respects how Chlamydia organizes this transport. One model posits that the Chlamydia-induced fragmentation of the Golgi-apparatus is required for normal transport processes to the inclusion and for chlamydial development, and the chlamydial protease CPAF has been controversially implicated in Golgi-fragmentation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The WASH complex is essential for creating a branched actin network on endosomes, aiding in cargo sorting and transport.
  • The study identified a specific fragment of the FAM21 subunit that can displace the WASH complex from endosomes and revealed that the retromer cargo selective complex (CSC) interacts with FAM21 to regulate this displacement.
  • This research supports the role of the retromer as a receptor for the WASH complex and highlights key interactions that are crucial for endosomal cargo sorting processes.
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