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The Coronin Family of Proteins Christoph S. Clemen, * Vasily
Rybakin and Ludwig Eichinger he coronins, first described in
Dictyostelium discoideum in 1991, have meanwhile been detected in
all eukaryotes except plants. They belong to the superfamily of
WD40-repeat Tproteins and represent a large family of proteins,
which are often involved in cytoskeletal functions. Phylogenetic
studies clearly distinguish 12 subfamilies of which six exclusively
occur in vertebrates. In the present book we have made a sincere
attempt to provide a comprehensive overview on all aspects of
coronin proteins including history, structure, subcellular
localization and function in different organisms. In addition, we
also included a general overview on the WD40 family of proteins and
the structurally related Kelch family. The book should be of
interest for scientists outside the field, but is more importantly
intended as a fast and competent guide for newcomers as well as
doctoral and postdoctoral scientists to coronin research in all its
facets. The book is divided into four major sections. It provides
in the first part an introduction into two superfamilies of
proteins with p-propellers, the WD40- and the Kelch-family. Lynn
Cooley and Andrew M. Hudson provide evidence that the WD40- and
Kelch-repeat families most likely did Figure 1. Condensed
phylogenetic tree of the coronin protein family. The tree
constitutes the basis of a new nomenclature and shows the
evolutionary relationship of the twelve coronin subfamilies
{CRN1-CRN12). See also chapter 11-2 by Reginald O. Morgan and M.
Pilar Fernandez
The Coronin Family of Proteins Christoph S. Clemen,* Vasily Rybakin
and Ludwig Eichinger he coronins, first described in Dictyostelium
discoideum in 1991, have meanwhile been detected in all eukaryotes
except plants. They belong to the superfamily of WD40-repeat
Tproteins and represent a large family of proteins, which are often
involved in cytoskeletal functions. Phylogenetic studies clearly
distinguish 12 subfamilies of which six exclusively occur in
vertebrates. In the present book we have made a sincere attempt to
provide a comprehensive overview on all aspects of coronin proteins
including history, structure, subcellular localization and function
in different organisms. In addition, we also included a general
overview on the WD40 family of proteins and the structurally
related Kelch family. The book should be of interest for scientists
outside the field, but is more importantly intended as a fast and
competent guide for newcomers as well as doctoral and postdoctoral
scientists to coronin research in all its facets. The book is
divided into four major sections. It provides in the first part an
introduction into two superfamilies of proteins with p-propellers,
the WD40- and the Kelch-family. Lynn Cooley and Andrew M. Hudson
provide evidence that the WD40- and Kelch-repeat families most
likely did Figure 1. Condensed phylogenetic tree of the coronin
protein family. The tree constitutes the basis of a new
nomenclature and shows the evolutionary relationship of the twelve
coronin subfamilies {CRN1-CRN12). See also chapter 11-2 by Reginald
O. Morgan and M. Pilar Fernandez.
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