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Primary Active Transporters: A Plethora of Plant Plasmalemma Proton
Pumps (M.R. Sussman). Studies on the Higher Plant
CalmodulinStimulated ATPase (D.E. Evans et al.). Secondary Ion and
Metabolite Transporters: ProtonSugar Cotransporters in Plants (N.
Sauer). Insights into the Structure of the Chloroplast Phosphate
Translocator Protein (H. Wallmeier et al.). Channel Proteins:
Soybean Nodulin26 (D.P.S. Verma). Putative LType Calcium Channels
in Plants (R. Ranjeva et al.). Receptor Proteins: Hormone
Perception and Signal Transduction in Aleurone (R. Hooley et al.).
The Auxin Receptor (R.M. Napier, M.A. Venis). Protein Targeting and
Assembly in Membranes: Sequence Determinants for Protein Import
into Chloroplasts and Thylakoid Membrane Protein Assembly (G. von
Heijne). 11 additional articles. Index.
This book presents the contributions of the main speakers to the
12th Long Ashton InternationalSymposium, heldat
theUniversityofBristolfrom 17thto20thSeptember 1991. Manyofthe
160delegates who attended presented posters, the abstractsofwhich
have been published separately and reflected thevigour,
excitementand originalityofthepresentations. The identity and
molecular structure of solute of membrane proteins are of interest
in of themselves but may be seen as only a step towards broader
questions about the regulation their activity and their integration
into the lifeofcells and organisms. This symposium was held at a
time when exciting progress was being made on the molecular biology
of some transporters, ion channels and hormone receptors. The
contributions reflect this progress in different degrees. Some
problems are less tractable than others and the mixture of success
stories and hopeful aspirations was a deliberate choice by the
organisers. At the symposium those who were still confronted with
great difficulties were listened to sympathetically and with
constructive interest. Itis hoped that their papers will be read in
the same way. During the symposium we discussed the natureofmany
transport proteinsand receptors, as well as the existence
ofadditional regulatory proteins such as protein kinases,
G-proteins and calmodulin. Wecould say that upto twentyproteins
wereconsidered inany detail. While this may sound like a
considerable achievement, the scaleofourignorance can be
illustrated byconsideringthatonatypicalsilver-stained,
two-dimensionalpolyacrylamidegelofpurified plant plasma membrane
polypeptides, between 150 and 200 spots are routinely shown;
radiolabelled membranes frequently giveeven more, indicating how
much membraneprotein there is, the function of which we have no
conceptual framework.
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