G Protein Coupled Receptors
G Protein Coupled Receptors
G Protein Coupled Receptors
RECEPTORS
STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL FAMILIES OF
PHYSIOLOGICAL RECEPTORS.
Receptors for physiological regulatory molecules can be assigned to
functional families whose members share similar molecular
structures and biochemical mechanisms with common features.
metabolism,
Neurotransmitters (eg.Ach)
Peptide hormones
Opioids
The α1A, α1B, and α1C receptor isoforms differ little in their
biochemical properties, although their tissue distributions are
distinct. The β1, β2, and β3 adrenergic receptor subtypes exhibit
differences in both tissue distribution regulation by phosphorylation
by G-protein receptor kinases (GRKs) and PKA.
Pharmacological differences among receptor sub-types are exploited
therapeutically through the development and use of receptor-
selective drugs. Such drug may be used to elicit different responses
from a single tissue when receptor subtypes initiate different
intracellular signals, or they may serve to differentially modulate
different cells or tissues that express one or another receptor
subtype.
1. Guanine nucleotide-binding
α subunit(which confers
specific recognition to both
receptors and effectors), and
2. An associated dimer of β and γ subunits that
helps confer membrane localization of the G protein
heterotrimer.
In the basal state of the receptor-heterotrimer
complex, the α subunit contains bound GDP and
the –α GDP: βγ complex is bound to the
unliganded receptor
G PROTEIN- SUBUNITS
The G protein family is comprised of
23 α subunits (which are the products of 17
genes)
7 β subunits, and
12 γ subunits.