Literature DB >> 10952985

Genetic mapping of the human C5a receptor. Identification of transmembrane amino acids critical for receptor function.

A Geva1, T B Lassere, O Lichtarge, S K Pollitt, T J Baranski.   

Abstract

Many hormones and sensory stimuli signal through a superfamily of seven transmembrane-spanning receptors to activate heterotrimeric G proteins. How the seven transmembrane segments of the receptors (a molecular architecture of bundled alpha-helices conserved from yeast to man) work as "on/off" switches remains unknown. Previously, we used random saturation mutagenesis coupled with a genetic selection in yeast to determine the relative importance of amino acids in four of the seven transmembrane segments of the human C5a receptor (Baranski, T. J., Herzmark, P., Lichtarge, O., Gerber, B. O., Trueheart, J., Meng, E. C., Iiri, T., Sheikh, S. P., and Bourne, H. R. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 15757-15765). In this study, we evaluate helices I, II, and IV, thereby furnishing a complete mutational map of the seven transmembrane helices of the human C5a receptor. Our analysis identified 19 amino acid positions resistant to non-conservative substitutions. When combined with the 25 essential residues previously identified in helices III and V-VII, they delineate two distinct components of the receptor switch: a ligand-binding surface at or near the extracellular surface of the helix bundle and a core cluster in the cytoplasmic half of the bundle. In addition, we found critical amino acids in the first and second helices that are predicted to face the lipid membrane. These residues form an extended surface that might mediate interactions with lipids and other membrane proteins or function as an oligomerization domain with other receptors.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10952985     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M005602200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  10 in total

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4.  The use of membrane translocating peptides to identify sites of interaction between the C5a receptor and downstream effector proteins.

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5.  Complement factor 5a receptor chimeras reveal the importance of lipid-facing residues in transport competence.

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Review 6.  Prediction and redesign of protein-protein interactions.

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7.  Identification of functionally important residues/domains in membrane proteins using an evolutionary approach coupled with systematic mutational analysis.

Authors:  Lavanya Rajagopalan; Fred A Pereira; Olivier Lichtarge; William E Brownell
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Review 8.  Function, structure and therapeutic potential of complement C5a receptors.

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Review 10.  The N-formyl peptide receptors and the anaphylatoxin C5a receptors: an overview.

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  10 in total

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