The Epsins Define a Family of Proteins That Interact with Components of the Clathrin Coat and Contain a New Protein Module*
暂无分享,去创建一个
P. De Camilli | V. Slepnev | P. P. Di Fiore | L. Pellegrini | A. Salcini | J. A. Rosenthal | Hong Chen | Pier Paolo Di Fiore | Vladimir I. Slepnev
[1] S. Emr,et al. Identification of a novel domain shared by putative components of the endocytic and cytoskeletal machinery , 2008, Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society.
[2] C. Der,et al. Splice Variants of Intersectin Are Components of the Endocytic Machinery in Neurons and Nonneuronal Cells* , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[3] S. Egan,et al. The EH and SH3 domain Ese proteins regulate endocytosis by linking to dynamin and Eps15 , 1999, The EMBO journal.
[4] P. De Camilli,et al. The Interaction of Epsin and Eps15 with the Clathrin Adaptor AP-2 Is Inhibited by Mitotic Phosphorylation and Enhanced by Stimulation-dependent Dephosphorylation in Nerve Terminals* , 1999, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[5] L. Castagnoli,et al. Intersectin, a Novel Adaptor Protein with Two Eps15 Homology and Five Src Homology 3 Domains* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[6] S. Antonarakis,et al. Two isoforms of a human intersectin (ITSN) protein are produced by brain-specific alternative splicing in a stop codon. , 1998, Genomics.
[7] Pier Paolo Di Fiore,et al. Epsin is an EH-domain-binding protein implicated in clathrin-mediated endocytosis , 1998, Nature.
[8] P. De Camilli,et al. Role of phosphorylation in regulation of the assembly of endocytic coat complexes. , 1998, Science.
[9] R. Kelly,et al. Dap160, a Neural-specific Eps15 Homology and Multiple SH3 Domain-containing Protein That Interacts with DrosophilaDynamin* , 1998, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[10] P. McPherson,et al. Multiple Amphiphysin II Splice Variants Display Differential Clathrin Binding: Identification of Two Distinct Clathrin‐Binding Sites , 1998, Journal of neurochemistry.
[11] J. Bonifacino,et al. Association of the AP-3 adaptor complex with clathrin. , 1998, Science.
[12] M. Mann,et al. In mouse brain profilin I and profilin II associate with regulators of the endocytic pathway and actin assembly , 1998, The EMBO journal.
[13] G Cesareni,et al. Binding specificity and in vivo targets of the EH domain, a novel protein-protein interaction module. , 1997, Genes & development.
[14] P. De Camilli,et al. The SH3p4/Sh3p8/SH3p13 protein family: binding partners for synaptojanin and dynamin via a Grb2-like Src homology 3 domain. , 1997, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[15] J. Benovic,et al. Arrestin/Clathrin Interaction , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[16] J. Benovic,et al. Arrestin/Clathrin Interaction , 1997, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[17] M. Kirschner,et al. Systematic identification of mitotic phosphoproteins , 1997, Current Biology.
[18] S. Emr,et al. A novel fluorescence-activated cell sorter-based screen for yeast endocytosis mutants identifies a yeast homologue of mammalian eps15 , 1996, The Journal of cell biology.
[19] A. Sparks,et al. Cloning of ligand targets: Systematic isolation of SH3 domain-containing proteins , 1996, Nature Biotechnology.
[20] A. Dautry‐Varsat,et al. The Ear of -Adaptin Interacts with the COOH-terminal Domain of the Eps15 Protein (*) , 1996, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[21] P. Camilli,et al. A presynaptic inositol-5-phosphatase , 1996, Nature.
[22] T. Südhof,et al. Phosphorylation of dynamin I and synaptic-vesicle recycling , 1994, Trends in Neurosciences.
[23] H. Riezman,et al. Endocytosis is required for the growth of vacuolar H(+)-ATPase- defective yeast: identification of six new END genes , 1994, The Journal of cell biology.
[24] M. Robinson,et al. The role of clathrin, adaptors and dynamin in endocytosis. , 1994, Current opinion in cell biology.
[25] L. Minichiello,et al. eps15, a novel tyrosine kinase substrate, exhibits transforming activity , 1993, Molecular and cellular biology.
[26] H. Riezman,et al. Actin and fimbrin are required for the internalization step of endocytosis in yeast. , 1993, The EMBO journal.
[27] P. Maycox,et al. Clathrin-coated vesicles in nervous tissue are involved primarily in synaptic vesicle recycling , 1992, The Journal of cell biology.
[28] P. Camilli,et al. Autoimmunity to glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) in stiffman syndrome and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus , 1991, Trends in Neurosciences.
[29] P. De Camilli,et al. Colocalization of synaptophysin with transferrin receptors: implications for synaptic vesicle biogenesis , 1991, The Journal of cell biology.
[30] Yc Chang,et al. Characterization of the proteins purified with monoclonal antibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase , 1988, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.
[31] M. Kozak. An analysis of 5'-noncoding sequences from 699 vertebrate messenger RNAs. , 1987, Nucleic acids research.
[32] P. Greengard,et al. Synapsin I (protein I), a nerve terminal-specific phosphoprotein. III. Its association with synaptic vesicles studied in a highly purified synaptic vesicle preparation , 1983, The Journal of cell biology.
[33] D. Ord,et al. PAUP:Phylogenetic analysis using parsi-mony , 1993 .