Prof. Dr. Eugen Kerkhoff
Research focus:
Actin/myosin functions in exocytic vesicle transport processes
Animals have separated the essential demands of biological life into specialized regimes including food recognition, ingestion and digestion, sexual reproduction and enemy defence. Networks of communicating cells act as steering devices to coordinate the concerted actions of the animal organs.
Cell communication is mediated by secretion of signalling molecules, which interact with receptors on recipient cells. Intracellular transport processes facilitate the release of the signalling factors and the membrane integration of receptors. The signalling factors and the receptors travel on routes of the exocytic pathway. They are transported by motor proteins along microtubule and actin filament tracks to the cell periphery, where the vesicle fuse with the plasma membrane.
We have discovered a coodinated generation of actin filaments and myosin motor protein activation on exocytic/secretory vesicles and are experimentally addressing the evolution and function of actin force generation in secretory vesicle transport. Of special interest are neurosecretory processes and how they influence learning, memory and behaviour. We employ a variety of modern molecular cell biology methods including mouse genetics, fluorescence microscopy, protein interaction studies, structural biology and in vitro reconstitution.
Prof. Dr. Eugen Kerkhoff