Tom Rapoport

Tom Rapoport, Ph.D.

Don W. Fawcett Professor of Cell Biology (HMS)
HHMI Investigator
LHRRB 401

Tom Rapoport, Ph.D., joined the faculty at Harvard Medical School in 1995. He received his Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the Humboldt University in East-Berlin for work in enzymology. He then focused on mathematical modeling of metabolism, for which he received his second degree (Habilitation) from the same institution. Before moving to the US, he worked at the Central Institute of Molecular Biology of the Academy of Sciences of the GDR and later at the Max-Delbrueck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin-Buch. In 1997, he became a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator.

The Rapoport Lab is interested in the mechanisms by which proteins are transported across membranes, how misfolded proteins are degraded, and how organelles form and maintain their characteristic shapes. Most of the projects center around the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). One project concerns the molecular mechanism by which proteins are translocated across the ER membrane or across the plasma membrane in bacteria and archaea. Much of the current work deals with ERAD (ER-associated protein degradation), a process in which misfolded proteins are retro-translocated across the ER membrane into the cytosol. Major questions concern the mechanism by which proteins move across the membrane and are extracted by the Cdc48 ATPase. Another project concerns the mechanism by which ER morphology, specifically the tubular ER network, is generated. More recently, the Rapoport lab has started to study how proteins are imported into peroxisomes, and how lung surfactant proteins generate lamellar bodies. The lab employs a variety of different techniques, including biochemical methods, such as reconstitutions with purified proteins, and structural biology methods, including X-ray crystallography and cryo-electron microscopy.

Harvard Medical School

Dept. of Cell Biology, LHRRB 401

240 Longwood Avenue

Boston, MA 02115

Lab phone: 617-432-1612

Yeast Sec proteins interact with polypeptides traversing the endoplasmic reticulum membrane.
Authors: Authors: Müsch A, Wiedmann M, Rapoport TA.
Cell
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Components and mechanism of protein translocation across the ER membrane.
Authors: Authors: Rapoport TA, Görlich D, Müsch A, Hartmann E, Prehn S, Wiedmann M, Otto A, Kostka S, Kraft R.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek
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Translocation of proteins through the endoplasmic reticulum membrane: investigation of their molecular environment by cross-linking
Authors: Authors: Hartmann E, Rapoport TA
Membrane Biogenesis and Protein Targeting
Protein transport across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane: facts, models, mysteries.
Authors: Authors: Rapoport TA.
FASEB J
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The identification of proteins in the proximity of signal-anchor sequences during their targeting to and insertion into the membrane of the ER.
Authors: Authors: High S, Görlich D, Wiedmann M, Rapoport TA, Dobberstein B.
J Cell Biol
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Gender-differential patterns of adolescent socialization in three arenas.
Authors: Authors: Rapoport T.
J Youth Adolesc
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Protein translocation. A bacterium catches up.
Authors: Authors: Rapoport TA.
Nature
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Probing the molecular environment of translocating polypeptide chains by cross-linking.
Authors: Authors: Görlich D, Kurzchalia TV, Wiedmann M, Rapoport TA.
Methods Cell Biol
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Segregation of the signal sequence receptor protein in the rough endoplasmic reticulum membrane.
Authors: Authors: Vogel F, Hartmann E, Görlich D, Rapoport TA.
Eur J Cell Biol
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The signal sequence receptor has a second subunit and is part of a translocation complex in the endoplasmic reticulum as probed by bifunctional reagents.
Authors: Authors: Görlich D, Prehn S, Hartmann E, Herz J, Otto A, Kraft R, Wiedmann M, Knespel S, Dobberstein B, Rapoport TA.
J Cell Biol
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