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Encyclopedia > Glial fibrillary acidic protein

Intermediate filaments are one component of the cytoskeleton - important structural components of living cells. Their size is intermediate between that of microfilaments and microtubules. They are assembled from several different proteins. IFs crisscross the cytosol from the nuclear envelope to the cell membrane.

Contents

Types

The different kinds of IFs share some basic characteristics: they are from 9 to 11 nm. in diameter and are very stable; their main function being a structural one. Different types of IFs are distinguished by the protein each is made of.

keratin

Lamin IFs

These form a network, the nuclear lamina, that supports the nuclear envelope. There are lamin A, B, and C filaments. Lamin A and C form the lamin network and are attached to the nuclear membrane by lamin B.


(See also: nuclear envelope)


Keratin IFs

These proteins are the most diverse among IFs. The many isoforms are divided in two groups: "soft" keratins (cytokeratins) in epithelial cells (image to right), and "hard" keratins (hair keratins) wich make up hair, nails, horns and reptilian scales. Ragardless of the group, keratin can be acidic or basic. Acidic and basic keratins can bind each other to form acidic-basic heterodimers, these heterodimers can then associate to make a keratin filament.


Type III IFs

Neurofilaments

These are found in nerve cells and are implicated in the radial growth of the axon.

  • α-Internexin
  • Neurofilament-L (NF-L)
  • Neurofilament-M (NF-M)
  • Neurofilament-H (NF-H)

Nestin

Intermediate filament type VI. It is found in neural stem cells.


Cell adhesion

At the plasma membrane, IFs are attached by adapter proteins forming desmosomes (cell-cell adhesion) and hemidesmosomes (cell-matrix adhesion).


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This GFAP is a 50-kD intracytoplasmic filamentous protein that constitutes a portion of, and is specific for, the cytoskeleton of the astrocyte.
Glial fibrillary acidic protein is a 50-kD intracytoplasmic filamentous protein that constitutes a portion of, and is specific for, the cytoskeleton of the astrocyte.
It is conceivable that different protein kinases play roles in the reorganization of the astrocyte's cytoskeleton in response to a variety of stimuli.[122] In addition, the sequential activation of different protein kinases that phosphorylate different protein residues on GFAP may be critical to the process of glial filament disassembly in mitosis.
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