| Literature DB >> 20689020 |
Venkata P Satagopam1, Margarita C Theodoropoulou, Christos K Stampolakis, Georgios A Pavlopoulos, Nikolaos C Papandreou, Pantelis G Bagos, Reinhard Schneider, Stavros J Hamodrakas.
Abstract
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are a major family of membrane receptors in eukaryotic cells. They play a crucial role in the communication of a cell with the environment. Ligands bind to GPCRs on the outside of the cell, activating them by causing a conformational change, and allowing them to bind to G-proteins. Through their interaction with G-proteins, several effector molecules are activated leading to many kinds of cellular and physiological responses. The great importance of GPCRs and their corresponding signal transduction pathways is indicated by the fact that they take part in many diverse disease processes and that a large part of efforts towards drug development today is focused on them. We present Human-gpDB, a database which currently holds information about 713 human GPCRs, 36 human G-proteins and 99 human effectors. The collection of information about the interactions between these molecules was done manually and the current version of Human-gpDB holds information for about 1663 connections between GPCRs and G-proteins and 1618 connections between G-proteins and effectors. Major advantages of Human-gpDB are the integration of several external data sources and the support of advanced visualization techniques. Human-gpDB is a simple, yet a powerful tool for researchers in the life sciences field as it integrates an up-to-date, carefully curated collection of human GPCRs, G-proteins, effectors and their interactions. The database may be a reference guide for medical and pharmaceutical research, especially in the areas of understanding human diseases and chemical and drug discovery. Database URLs: http://schneider.embl.de/human_gpdb; http://bioinformatics.biol.uoa.gr/human_gpdb/Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20689020 PMCID: PMC2931634 DOI: 10.1093/database/baq019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Database (Oxford) ISSN: 1758-0463 Impact factor: 3.451
Figure 1.Over view of Human-gpDB web application. (a) Backend of the application consisting of manually collected information regarding GPCRs, G-proteins, effectors and their interactions as well as a wide range of publicly available information for each of these proteins stored in a MySQL database (‘Data Integration’ section for more details). (b) A CGI-Perl script handles the communication between the client and the server and (c) provides a wide range of information as output to the user (see ‘Utility’ section for more details). The system can be coupled with (d) a 2D visualization tool (Medusa) and a 3D visualization tool (Arena3D), which allows the easy visualization of the relationships between GPCRs, G-Proteins, effectors and the drugs (see ‘Visualization’ sections for more details).
Number of families and subfamilies in each GPCR class
| GPCRs’ Class | No. of GPCR Families | No. of GPCR Subfamilies |
|---|---|---|
| Class A | 55 | 640 (422 subfamilies of olfactory receptor) |
| Class B | 6 | 16 |
| Class C | 4 | 41 (29 subfamilies of taste receptors) |
| Frizzled/Smoothened | 2 | 11 |
| Total | 67 | 708 |
Class A is the largest and consists of 55 families and 640 subfamilies (422 subfamilies of olfactory receptors). Class B consists of 6 families and 16 subfamilies. Class C consists of 4 families and 41 subfamilies (29 subfamilies of taste receptors). Frizzled/Smoothened class consists of 2 families and 11 subfamilies.
Distribution of GPCR subfamilies based on the number of Gα families with which they interact
| Couples with | No. of GPCRs’ Subfamilies |
|---|---|
| 1 Gα family | 623 |
| 2 Gα families | 48 |
| 3 Gα families | 15 |
| All 4 Gα families | 1 |
| Unknown coupling | 21 |
| Total | 708 |
One subfamily of GPCRs, the TSHR family, couples with members of all four Gα families. Most of the GPCR subfamilies couple with members of one Gα family (623 out of the 708 subfamilies of GPCRs). Fifteen GPCR subfamilies couple with members from 3 Gα families, whereas 48 couple with members from 2 Gα families. Twenty-one GPCR subfamilies do not have known coupling.
Figure 5.Visualization of human Prostanoid TP receptor’s interactions (drugs included). (a) Arena3D Visualization: Human Prostanoid TP receptor protein of Class A GPCR family targets four Gα G-Proteins that belong to Gq/11 family. The G-Proteins are connected to effectors proteins belonging to eight specific families. For this specific receptor 23 different drugs exist. (b) Medusa 2D Visualization: Human Prostanoid TP receptor protein targets Gα G-Proteins that belong to Gq/11 family. These G-Proteins interact with 11 different subfamilies of effectors. For this specific receptor 23 different drugs exist.