| Literature DB >> 6313161 |
M O'Connor-McCourt, M D Hollenberg.
Abstract
The action of polypeptide hormones is discussed in the context of observations made both with receptors, like the ones for epidermal growth factor (urogastrone) (EGF-URO), insulin, and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), and with acceptors, like the ones that participate in the adsorptive pinocytosis of substances like cholesterol (low density lipoprotein acceptor), cobalamin (transcobalamin-II acceptor), and asialoglycoproteins (galactose acceptor). The overall processes that both pharmacologic receptors and acceptors undergo subsequent to ligand binding comprise (a) microclustering; (b) aggregation at both coated ("coated pits") and uncoated plasma membrane regions; (c) internalization, with the formation of endocytic vesicles (endosomes or receptosomes); and (d) either recycling of endosomes (receptosomes) to the plasma membrane or fusion of endosomes (receptosomes) with lysosomes, accompanied by proteolytic degradation of the internalized ligand-receptor complex. The relevance of these processes to hormone action is discussed. Further, illustrative studies with EGF-URO are used to highlight general mechanisms that are thought to participate in the action of a variety of peptide hormones. The microclustering event and the concomitant receptor-regulated membrane phosphorylation reactions are emphasized as key plasma-membrane-localized processes that are very likely involved in the rapid (minutes to tens of minutes) of many peptide hormones. For the delayed actions of hormones (hours to tens of hours; e.g., DNA synthesis), the potential importance of nonlysosomal receptor processing, mediated by SH-requiring proteases that generate intracellular receptor fragments, is pointed out. A scheme for the action of EGF-URO is outlined and a model for peptide hormone action is presented that illustrates how multiple chemical mediators of hormone action may result from the combination of a single hormone with its unique receptor.Entities:
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Year: 1983 PMID: 6313161 DOI: 10.1139/o83-085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Biochem Cell Biol ISSN: 0714-7511