نتایج جستجو برای: gpcr

تعداد نتایج: 4523  

2013
Massimo Sandal Tran Phuoc Duy Matteo Cona Hoang Zung Paolo Carloni Francesco Musiani Alejandro Giorgetti

G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are a superfamily of cell signaling membrane proteins that include >750 members in the human genome alone. They are the largest family of drug targets. The vast diversity and relevance of GPCRs contrasts with the paucity of structures available: only 21 unique GPCR structures have been experimentally determined as of the beginning of 2013. User-friendly model...

2018
Shan Yu Litao Sun Yufei Jiao Leo Tsz On Lee

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest family of plasma membrane receptors. Emerging evidence demonstrates that signaling through GPCRs affects numerous aspects of cancer biology such as vascular remolding, invasion, and migration. Therefore, development of GPCR-targeted drugs could provide a new therapeutic strategy to treating a variety of cancers. G protein-coupled receptor kina...

Journal: :Proteomics 2007
Matthew N Davies David E Gloriam Andrew Secker Alex A Freitas Miguel Mendao Jon Timmis Darren R Flower

The G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily fulfils various metabolic functions and interacts with a diverse range of ligands. There is a lack of sequence similarity between the six classes that comprise the GPCR superfamily. Moreover, most novel GPCRs found have low sequence similarity to other family members which makes it difficult to infer properties from related receptors. Many diffe...

Journal: :Cancer letters 2006
Susanne Fuessel Bernd Weigle Uta Schmidt Gustavo Baretton Rainer Koch Michael Bachmann E Peter Rieber Manfred P Wirth Axel Meye

Recently, we identified the novel protein D-GPCR (Dresden G protein-coupled receptor) which is selectively overexpressed in human prostate cancer (PCa) and belongs to the subfamily of odorant-like orphan GPCRs. Quantification of D-GPCR transcripts in paired malignant and non-malignant prostate tissues of 106 patients with primary PCa by real-time PCR demonstrated a significant up-regulation of ...

2015
Jakobus van Unen Jeanette Woolard Ago Rinken Carsten Hoffmann Stephen J. Hill Joachim Goedhart Michael R. Bruchas Michel Bouvier Merel J. W. Adjobo-Hermans

The last frontier for a complete understanding of G-protein–coupled receptor (GPCR) biology is to be able to assess GPCR activity, interactions, and signaling in vivo, in real time within biologically intact systems. This includes the ability to detect GPCR activity, trafficking, dimerization, protein-protein interactions, second messenger production, and downstream signaling events with high s...

2009

Introduction Owing to historic inefficiency of mass random bioscreening, the current paradigm suggests that target-specific and pharmacokinetic properties of small molecule libraries should be addressed as early as possible in the discovery process. Computational medicinal chemistry can address this problem at the level of pre-synthetic library design. A number of advanced in silico methods hav...

Journal: :Molecular pharmacology 2005
JoAnn Trejo

Internalization, recycling and lysosomal sorting are key processes that regulate the temporal and spatial signaling of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Interactions between GPCR intracytosolic sorting signals and adaptor proteins facilitate trafficking through the endocytic pathway. To date only a few sorting signals and molecules that regulate GPCR trafficking have been identified. A study...

Journal: :Biochemical Society transactions 2013
James Barwell Mark Wheatley Alex C Conner Bruck Taddese Shabana Vohra Christopher A Reynolds David R Poyner

The CGRP (calcitonin gene-related peptide) receptor is a family B GPCR (G-protein-coupled receptor). It consists of a GPCR, CLR (calcitonin receptor-like receptor) and an accessory protein, RAMP1 (receptor activity modifying protein 1). RAMP1 is needed for CGRP binding and also cell-surface expression of CLR. CLR is an example of a family B GPCR. Unlike family A GPCRs, little is known about how...

Journal: :Current opinion in biotechnology 2005
William Thomsen John Frazer David Unett

G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are valuable molecular targets for drug discovery. An important aspect of the early drug discovery process is the design and implementation of high-throughput GPCR functional assays that allow the cost-effective screening of large compound libraries to identify novel drug candidates. Several functional assay kits based on fluorescence and/or chemiluminescence...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید