Lessons from tomographic studies of the mammalian Golgi


Autoria(s): Marsh, B. J.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

Basic structure studies of the biosynthetic machinery of the cell by electron microscopy (EM) have underpinned much of our fundamental knowledge in the areas of molecular cell biology and membrane traffic. Driven by our collective desire to understand how changes in the complex and dynamic structure of this enigmatic organelle relate to its pivotal roles in the cell, the comparatively high-resolution glimpses of the Golgi and other compartments of the secretory pathway offered to us through EM have helped to inspire the development and application of some of our most informative, complimentary (molecular, biochemical and genetic) approaches. Even so, no one has yet even come close to relating the basic molecular mechanisms of transport, through and from the Golgi, to its ultrastructure, to everybody's satisfaction. Over the past decade, EM tomography has afforded new insights into structure -function relationships of the Golgi and provoked a re-evaluation of older paradigms. By providing a set of tools for structurally dissecting cells at high-resolution in three-dimensions (3D), EM tomography has emerged as a method for studying molecular cell biology in situ. As we move rapidly toward the establishment of molecular atlases of organelles through advances in proteomics and genomics, tomographic studies of the Golgi offer the tantalizing possibility that one day, we will be able to map the spatio-temporal coordinates of Golgi-related proteins and lipids accurately in the context of 4D cellular space. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75683

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier Science Bv

Palavras-Chave #Mammalian #Golgi #Em #Tomography #Membrane Traffic #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Cell Biology #Electron-microscope Tomography #Pancreatic Beta-cell #Thick Biological Specimens #Wave-front Reconstruction #Cryoelectron Tomography #3-dimensional Reconstruction #Endoplasmic-reticulum #Saccharomyces-cerevisiae #Membrane Differentiation #Macromolecular Complexes #C1 #320602 Cell Physiology #730105 Endocrine organs and diseases (incl. diabetes) #06 Biological Sciences #0605 Microbiology #0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Tipo

Journal Article