Flies without scramblases (right) have extra synaptic vesicles.
Scramblases were initially identified in human blood cells through a search for proteins that could transfer phospholipids from one membrane leaflet to the other. Yet mice lacking two of the four mouse scramblase genes showed normal phospholipid scrambling. Therefore, either the other two homologues compensated for scrambling function or the protein family has a previously unidentified function.
To find out, Acharya et al. generated flies lacking both of the Drosophila scramblase genes. During apoptosis, phosphatidylserine moved from the inner leaflet to the outer one as expected, indicating that the...
The Rockefeller University Press
2006
The Rockefeller University Press
2006
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