Evolutionary biochemistry to trace the origins and mechanisms of cellular signaling
- Datum
- 12.06.2025
- Zeit
- 11:00 - 12:00
- Sprecher
- Dolf Weijers
- Zugehörigkeit
- Laboratory of Biochemistry, Wageningen University, Netherlands
- Serie
- MPI-CBG Thursday Seminar
- Sprache
- en
- Hauptthema
- Biologie
- Host
- Anne Grapin-Botton
- Beschreibung
- The behavior of cells is dictated by a multitude of signals, and response mechanisms interpret these signals and define cellular output. While there is a relatively detailed understanding of the mechanisms that perceive, relay and transduce signals in model organisms, it is often poorly understood how these originated and evolved. As a consequence, it is nearly impossible in any extant organism to define which properties of a signaling system are ancestral and which represent specialized, derived features. All cellular signaling, complex or simple, originated from the assembly of multiple components into a pathway. In my talk, I will show how an evolutionary biochemistry approach can not only reveal the origin and evolution of a signaling pathway, but also identify its core design principles and inspire the discovery of new response pathways. I will use examples from our ongoing research program on the plant signaling molecule auxin and show how the use of comparative phylogenetic strategies, combined with mechanistic, genetic and biochemical analysis within a simple model system, allows to reconstruct the origin and evolution of a complex signaling system. I will also show how evolutionary innovations in transcription factors have led to the emergence of a competition-based system of nuclear protein condensates. Lastly, I will show how – through an evolutionary lens – we have discovered a deeply conserved, ancient, yet unsuspected auxin response system that urges questions about the ancestral function of this signaling molecule.
Letztmalig verändert: 12.06.2025, 07:35:41
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Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics (MPI-CBG CBG Large Auditorium)Pfotenhauerstraße10801307Dresden
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- +49 351 210-0
- Fax
- +49 351 210-2000
- MPI-CBG
- Homepage
- http://www.mpi-cbg.de
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Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and GeneticsPfotenhauerstraße10801307Dresden
- Telefon
- +49 351 210-0
- Fax
- +49 351 210-2000
- MPI-CBG
- Homepage
- http://www.mpi-cbg.de
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