FKBPs: at the crossroads of folding and transduction. Harrar, Y., Bellini, C., & Faure, J. Trends in Plant Science, 6(9):426–431, September, 2001.
FKBPs: at the crossroads of folding and transduction [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
FK506-binding proteins (FKBPs) belong to the large family of peptidyl–prolyl cis–trans isomerases, which are known to be involved in many cellular processes, such as cell signalling, protein trafficking and transcription. FKBPs associate into protein complexes, although the involvement and precise role of their foldase activity remain to be elucidated. FKBPs represent a large gene family in plants that is involved in growth and development. Disruption of genes encoding FKBPs in plants and animals has underlined the importance of this family of proteins in the regulation of cell division and differentiation.
@article{harrar_fkbps_2001,
	title = {{FKBPs}: at the crossroads of folding and transduction},
	volume = {6},
	issn = {1360-1385},
	shorttitle = {{FKBPs}},
	url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1360138501020441},
	doi = {10/c79bct},
	abstract = {FK506-binding proteins (FKBPs) belong to the large family of peptidyl–prolyl cis–trans isomerases, which are known to be involved in many cellular processes, such as cell signalling, protein trafficking and transcription. FKBPs associate into protein complexes, although the involvement and precise role of their foldase activity remain to be elucidated. FKBPs represent a large gene family in plants that is involved in growth and development. Disruption of genes encoding FKBPs in plants and animals has underlined the importance of this family of proteins in the regulation of cell division and differentiation.},
	language = {en},
	number = {9},
	urldate = {2021-11-02},
	journal = {Trends in Plant Science},
	author = {Harrar, Yaël and Bellini, Catherine and Faure, Jean-Denis},
	month = sep,
	year = {2001},
	keywords = {Heat shock protein, Ppiase, calcineurin, calcium channel, cell division and differentiation, immunophilin, pasticcino1, receptors, rotamase, salt stress, steroid and TGFβ},
	pages = {426--431},
}

Downloads: 0