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1.
Ca2+ signaling plays a crucial role in virtually all cellular processes, from the origin of new life at fertilization to the end
of life when cells die. Both the influx of external Ca2+ through Ca2+-permeable channels and its release from intracellular stores are essential to the signaling function. Intracellular Ca2+ is influenced by mitogenic factors which control the entry and progression of the cell cycle; this is a strong indication
for a role of Ca2+ in the control of the cycle, but surprisingly, the possibility of such a role has only been paid scant attention in the literature.
Substantial progress has nevertheless been made in recent years in relating Ca2+ and the principal decoder of its information, calmodulin, to the modulation of various cycle steps. The aim of this review
is to critically discuss the evidence for a role of Ca2+ in the cell cycle and to discuss Ca2+-dependent pathways regulating cell growth and differentiation.
Received 2 March 2005; received after revision 9 May 2005; accepted 24 May 2005 相似文献
2.
In the sixties James Watson suggested a twosite model for the ribosome comprising the P site for the peptidyl transfer RNA
(tRNA) before peptide-bond formation and the A site, where decoding takes place according to the codon exposed there. In the
eighties a third tRNA binding site was detected, the E site, which was specific for deacylated tRNA and turned out to be a
universal feature of ribosomes. However, despite having three tRNA binding sites, only two tRNAs occupy the ribosome at a
time during protein synthesis: at the A and P sites before translocation (PRE state) and at the P and E sites after translocation
(POST state). The importance of having two tRNAs in the POST state has been revealed during the last 25 years, showing that
the E site contributes two fundamental features: (i) the fact that incorporation of a wrong amino acid is not harmful for
the cell (only 1 in about 400 misincorporations destroys the function of a protein) stems from the presence of an E-tRNA;
(ii) maintenance of the reading frame is one of the most remarkable achievements of the ribosome, essential for faithful translation
of the genetic information. The presence of the POST state E-tRNA prevents loss of the reading frame.
Received 14 March 2006; received after revision 8 June 2006; accepted 4 August 2006 相似文献