Title : G protein-coupled receptor interacting proteins: emerging roles in localization and signal transduction - Brady_2002_Cell.Signal_14_297 |
Author(s) : Brady AE , Limbird LE |
Ref : Cell Signal , 14 :297 , 2002 |
Abstract :
The mechanism by which G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) translate extracellular signals into cellular changes initially was envisioned as a simple linear model: activation of the receptor by agonist binding leads to dissociation of the heterotrimeric GTP-binding G protein into its alpha and betagamma subunits, both of which can activate or inhibit various downstream effector molecules. The plethora of recently described multidomain scaffolding proteins and accessory/chaperone molecules that interact with GPCR, including GPCR themselves as homo- or heterodimers, provides for diverse molecular mechanisms for ligand recognition, signalling specificity, and receptor trafficking. This review will summarize the recently described GPCR-interacting proteins and their individual functional roles, as understood. Implicit in the search for the functional relevance of these interactions is the expectation that enhancement or disruption of target cell-specific events could serve as highly selective therapeutic opportunities. |
PubMedSearch : Brady_2002_Cell.Signal_14_297 |
PubMedID: 11858937 |
Brady AE, Limbird LE (2002)
G protein-coupled receptor interacting proteins: emerging roles in localization and signal transduction
Cell Signal
14 :297
Brady AE, Limbird LE (2002)
Cell Signal
14 :297