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  1. Article

    Open Access

    Mitochondrial complexome reveals quality-control pathways of protein import

    Mitochondria have crucial roles in cellular energetics, metabolism, signalling and quality control14. They contain around 1,000 different proteins that often assemble into complexes and supercomplexes such as re...

    Uwe Schulte, Fabian den Brave, Alexander Haupt, Arushi Gupta, Jiyao Song in Nature (2023)

  2. Article

    Open Access

    A slit-diaphragm-associated protein network for dynamic control of renal filtration

    The filtration of blood in the kidney which is crucial for mammalian life is determined by the slit-diaphragm, a cell-cell junction between the foot processes of renal podocytes. The slit-diaphragm is thought ...

    Maciej K. Kocylowski, Hande Aypek, Wolfgang Bildl in Nature Communications (2022)

  3. Article

    Open Access

    The two-pore channel TPC1 is required for efficient protein processing through early and recycling endosomes

    Two-pore channels (TPCs) are localized in endo-lysosomal compartments and assumed to play an important role for vesicular fusion and endosomal trafficking. Recently, it has been shown that both TPC1 and 2 were...

    Jan Castonguay, Joachim H. C. Orth, Thomas Müller, Faten Sleman in Scientific Reports (2017)

  4. Article

    Open Access

    AMPA-receptor specific biogenesis complexes control synaptic transmission and intellectual ability

    AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs), key elements in excitatory neurotransmission in the brain, are macromolecular complexes whose properties and cellular functions are determined by the co-assembled consti...

    Aline Brechet, Rebecca Buchert, Jochen Schwenk, Sami Boudkkazi in Nature Communications (2017)

  5. No Access

    Article

    Modular composition and dynamics of native GABAB receptors identified by high-resolution proteomics

    GABAB receptors are the most abundant inhibitory G protein–coupled receptors in the mammalian brain. Using high-resolution proteomics, the authors show that native GABAB receptors are macromolecular complexes wit...

    Jochen Schwenk, Enrique Pérez-Garci, Andy Schneider, Astrid Kollewe in Nature Neuroscience (2016)

  6. No Access

    Article

    Native GABAB receptors are heteromultimers with a family of auxiliary subunits

    A proteomics study of GABAB receptors, the receptors for γ-aminobutyric acid, the main inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain, throws new light on the origin of their functional diversity. Rather than being het...

    Jochen Schwenk, Michaela Metz, Gerd Zolles, Rostislav Turecek, Thorsten Fritzius in Nature (2010)