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Phosphoinositides (PIs) are minor components of cellular membranes
that play critical regulatory roles in several intracellular
functions. This book describes the main enzymes regulating the
turnover of each of the seven PIs in mammalian cells, some of their
intracellular functions and some evidence of their involvement in
human diseases. Due to the complex inter-relation between the
distinct PIs and the plethora of functions that they can regulate
inside a cell, this book is not meant to be a comprehensive
coverage of all aspects of PIs signalling but rather an overview on
the current state of the field and where it could go from here.
Phosphoinositide and inositol phosphates interact with and modulate
the recruitment and activation of key regulatory proteins and in
doing so control diverse functions including cell growth and
proliferation, apoptosis, cytoskeletal dynamics, insulin action,
vesicle trafficking and nuclear function. Initially, inositide
signaling was limited to the PLC pathway; however, it is now clear
that all the seven phosphoinositides and more than 30 different
inositol phosphates likely have specific signaling functions.
Moreover there is a growing list of proteins that are regulated by
inositol signaling. This has raised the question as to how inositol
signaling can control diverse processes and yet maintain signaling
specificity. Controlling the levels of inositol signaling molecules
and their subcellular compartmentalisation is likely to be
critical. This meeting will bring together scientists from
different backgrounds to discuss how understanding inositol
signaling may be used to target complex human diseases that
manifest themselves when inositol signaling is deregulated.
Phosphoinositides (PIs) are minor components of cellular membranes
that play critical regulatory roles in several intracellular
functions. This book describes the main enzymes regulating the
turnover of each of the seven PIs in mammalian cells, some of their
intracellular functions and some evidence of their involvement in
human diseases. Due to the complex inter-relation between the
distinct PIs and the plethora of functions that they can regulate
inside a cell, this book is not meant to be a comprehensive
coverage of all aspects of PIs signalling but rather an overview on
the current state of the field and where it could go from here.
Phosphoinositide and inositol phosphates interact with and modulate
the recruitment and activation of key regulatory proteins and in
doing so control diverse functions including cell growth and
proliferation, apoptosis, cytoskeletal dynamics, insulin action,
vesicle trafficking and nuclear function. Initially, inositide
signaling was limited to the PLC pathway; however, it is now clear
that all the seven phosphoinositides and more than 30 different
inositol phosphates likely have specific signaling functions.
Moreover there is a growing list of proteins that are regulated by
inositol signaling. This has raised the question as to how inositol
signaling can control diverse processes and yet maintain signaling
specificity. Controlling the levels of inositol signaling molecules
and their subcellular compartmentalisation is likely to be
critical. This meeting will bring together scientists from
different backgrounds to discuss how understanding inositol
signaling may be used to target complex human diseases that
manifest themselves when inositol signaling is deregulated.
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