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Jörg Tatzelt, Konstanze Winklhofer and Simran Goel (from left) carried out the investigations together. Photo Credit: RUB, Marquard |
Certain biomolecules in the form of active complexes temporarily accumulate in cells. This can be crucial for their functionality.
When transmitting signals within cells, many individual steps interlock. Among other things, proteins are provided with certain building blocks that switch their function on or off. In order to ensure fast signal transmission, these building blocks accumulate in the cell at certain locations for a limited time; Researchers speak of biomolecular condensates. A team around Prof. Dr. Konstanze Winklhofer, head of the Molecular Cell Biology Chair at the Ruhr University Bochum, has shown that the NEMO protein also forms condensates and which mechanism underlies NEMO condensate formation. The findings are important for understanding signal transmissions in the immune and nervous systems. The researchers report in the Life Science Alliance journal.