College of Arts & Sciences home AppalNET Search ASU's Website ASU Calendar of Events Campus and community Maps Technology Resources and Help ASU Home Page
  Department of Biology
 HOME

 Students
    - Undergraduate
    - Graduate

 Faculty/Staff
 Research
 Scholarships
 Alumni
 Visitors
 
 Seminars &     Workshops
 Positions
Available
 Site Map
 
 
Goto evolution.appstate.edu
 
Department Calendar
 
Contact Info

P.O. Box 32027
572 Rivers Street
Boone, NC
28608-2027
(828) 262-3025
FAX: (828) 262-2127

Chairperson:
Dr. Steven Seagle
seaglesw@appstate.edu

 

Plant Molecular Biology

Dr. Annkatrin Rose
Assistant Professor
Ph.D. University of Hamburg, Germany

Rankin West 266
(828) 262-7395
rosea@appstate.edu

http://www.appstate.edu/~rosea

I am interested in a group of plant proteins characterized by a "coiled-coil" structural motif. Coiled-coil proteins are typically involved in forming fibers and scaffolds in cells and help organize the shape, substructures, and movement of organelles within cells. In humans, mutations in coiled-coil proteins have been implemented in diseases such as cancer, muscular dystrophy, premature aging, and neurological defects. I am studying this group of proteins in plants to understand their role in an organism that does not possess muscle or nerve cells (where most long coiled-coil structures are found and studied in animals).

The group of proteins that I am particularly interested in is the chloroplast coiled-coil proteins. Chloroplasts are photosynthetic organelles that are thought to have evolved from endosymbiotic prokaryotes. However, most prokaryotes do not contain long coiled-coil proteins of the type we find in eukaryotic cells. Therefore, their import into chloroplasts is intriguing and suggests that they may have played a crucial role in the evolution of early endosymbionts into the highly structured photosynthetic organelles we find today. The study of these proteins should provide further insight into chloroplast structure and function as well as the relationship between the organelle and the host cell.

Selected Publications

Xu, X., Rose, A., and Meier, I. (2007). NUA activities at the plant nuclear pore. Plant Signaling and Behavior 2: 553-555.

Xu, X., Rose, A., Muthuswamy, S., Jeong, S.Y., Venkatakrishnan, S., and Meier, I. (2007). NUCLEAR-PORE ANCHOR, the Arabidopsis homolog of Tpr/Mlp1/Mlp2/Megator, is involved in mRNA export, SUMO homeostasis and the regulation of flowering time via FLOWERING LOCUS C. Plant Cell 19: 1537-1548.

Contributor to: Merchant et al. (2007). The Chlamydomonas genome reveals the evolution of key animal and plant functions. Science 318: 245-250.

Rose, A. (2007) Open mitosis: nuclear envelope dynamics. In: Verma, D.P.S., and Hong, Z. (eds.), Cell Division Control in Plants, Springer-Verlag, Heidelberg. Plant Cell Monogr. 9: 207-230.

Rose, A., Stahlberg, E.A., and Meier, I. (2007) Genome-wide identification and comparative analysis of coiled-coil proteins. Scalable Computing: Practice and Experience 8: 167-171.

Back to Top

 

 

 

Copyright © 2005 • College of Arts & Sciences

Design Approved: Valid HTML 4.01!    Valid CSS!    508 Accessible
If you have any questions or issues regarding the accessibility of these pages, please contact vangildertm@appstate.edu