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Carl E. Creutz

Researcher at University of Virginia

Publications -  108
Citations -  7334

Carl E. Creutz is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Exocytosis & Annexin. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 107 publications receiving 7119 citations. Previous affiliations of Carl E. Creutz include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & National Institutes of Health.

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Annexins: linking Ca2+ signalling to membrane dynamics.

TL;DR: Eukaryotic cells contain various Ca2-effector proteins that mediate cellular responses to changes in intracellular Ca2+ levels, and a unique class of these proteins — annexins — can bind to certain membrane phospholipids in a Ca2+.
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The annexins and exocytosis

TL;DR: The annexins are a group of homologous proteins that bind phospholipids in the presence of calcium that may provide a major pathway for communication between cellular membranes and their cytoplasmic environment.
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Aggregation of chromaffin granules by calpactin at micromolar levels of calcium

TL;DR: It is reported here that calpactin promotes the Ca2-dependent aggregation and fatty acid-dependent fusion of chromaffin granule membranes at a level of Ca2+ that is lower than that reported for other granule-aggregating proteins, and which parallels theCa2+ requirement for secretion from permeabilized Chromaffin cells.
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Identification and purification of an adrenal medullary protein (synexin) that causes calcium-dependent aggregation of isolated chromaffin granules.

TL;DR: It is suggested that synexin may be the intracellular receptor for calcium in the process of exocytosis from the adrenal medulla, acting to promote close association of granules both with other granules as well as with plasma membranes prior to secretion.
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cis-Unsaturated fatty acids induce the fusion of chromaffin granules aggregated by synexin.

TL;DR: The regulators of this in vitro fusion--Ca2+, synexin, and free, cis-unsaturated fatty acids--may be present in the cytoplasm of the chromaffin cell when it is stimulated to release epinephrine and granule proteins by exocytosis.