R01 GM071596A1 - PROGRAM NARRATIVE Cells require distinct adhesion complexes at their cell surface to form contacts with their neighbors or with the extracellular environment, and the protein vinculin plays essential roles in linking these adhesion complexes to the actin cytoskeleton, and in directing the cell migration machinery. The formation of these links requires that vinculin transition from its closed, inactive conformation to its activated state, and the studies supported by R01 GM071596 defined the structure of inactive and activated vinculin, and revealed its mechanism of activation. However, essentially nothing is known regarding the interactions of activated vinculin with its binding partners in the cell, and our new studies in this revised competitive renewal application of R01 GM071596 will define the structure and function of vinculin in complex with three of its partners that play essential roles in adhesion complexes, in cell migration, and in the localized production of components of adhesion junctions. Finally, we will also define the structure and function of metavinculin, an isoform of vinculin that plays essential roles in the formation and function of muscle tissue.
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