Literature DB >> 8056151

Constitutively active receptors as a disease-causing mechanism.

J Parma1, L Duprez, J Van Sande, R Paschke, M Tonacchera, J Dumont, G Vassart.   

Abstract

Membrane receptors have appeared early in evolution as the means for the unicellular organism to sense its environment. With the emergence of social cellular life in multicellular organisms, membrane receptors have acquired the additional functions of sensing the presence of similar cells (as in the aggregation phenomenon of Dictyostelium discoideum) (Klein et al., 1988) or the presence of the mate (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) (Cross et al., 1988), and to detect endocrine signals emitted by cells in distant tissues. As the latter function is central to homeostasis and regulation of cell growth, the downstream regulatory cascades under receptor control are the subject of intense research with implications in virtually all fields of biomedical science. The impact of the analysis of tyrosine kinase-activated cascades on our understanding of carcinogenesis is but one example of such an advance.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8056151     DOI: 10.1016/0303-7207(94)90296-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cell Endocrinol        ISSN: 0303-7207            Impact factor:   4.102


  5 in total

Review 1.  Review: amino acid domains involved in constitutive activation of G-protein-coupled receptors.

Authors:  P J Pauwels; T Wurch
Journal:  Mol Neurobiol       Date:  1998       Impact factor: 5.590

Review 2.  Receptors and G proteins as primary components of transmembrane signal transduction. Part 1. G-protein-coupled receptors: structure and function.

Authors:  T Gudermann; B Nürnberg; G Schultz
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  1995-02       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Real-time analysis of dopamine: antagonist interactions at recombinant human D2long receptor upon modulation of its activation state.

Authors:  P J Pauwels; S Tardif; T Wurch; F C Colpaert
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 8.739

4.  Activation of constitutive 5-hydroxytryptamine(1B) receptor by a series of mutations in the BBXXB motif: positioning of the third intracellular loop distal junction and its G(o)alpha protein interactions.

Authors:  P J Pauwels; A Gouble; T Wurch
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1999-10-15       Impact factor: 3.857

5.  Constitutively active ALK2 receptor mutants require type II receptor cooperation.

Authors:  Jana Bagarova; Ashley J Vonner; Kelli A Armstrong; Jan Börgermann; Carol S C Lai; Donna Y Deng; Hideyuki Beppu; Ivan Alfano; Panagis Filippakopoulos; Nicholas W Morrell; Alex N Bullock; Petra Knaus; Yuji Mishina; Paul B Yu
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2013-04-09       Impact factor: 4.272

  5 in total

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