G蛋白偶联受体
内化
受体
变构调节
甲状旁腺激素
信号转导
内体
细胞生物学
细胞信号
G蛋白
生物
环磷酸腺苷
甲状旁腺激素受体
化学
激素受体
生物化学
内科学
钙
遗传学
医学
癌症
乳腺癌
作者
Jean‐Pierre Vilardaga,Lisa J. Clark,Alex D. White,Ieva Sutkevičiu̅tė,Ji Young Lee,İvet Bahar
出处
期刊:Endocrine Reviews
[The Endocrine Society]
日期:2022-12-12
卷期号:44 (3): 474-491
被引量:15
标识
DOI:10.1210/endrev/bnac032
摘要
The classical paradigm of G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling via G proteins is grounded in a view that downstream responses are relatively transient and confined to the cell surface, but this notion has been revised in recent years following the identification of several receptors that engage in sustained signaling responses from subcellular compartments following internalization of the ligand-receptor complex. This phenomenon was initially discovered for the parathyroid hormone (PTH) type 1 receptor (PTH1R), a vital GPCR for maintaining normal calcium and phosphate levels in the body with the paradoxical ability to build or break down bone in response to PTH binding. The diverse biological processes regulated by this receptor are thought to depend on its capacity to mediate diverse modes of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) signaling. These include transient signaling at the plasma membrane and sustained signaling from internalized PTH1R within early endosomes mediated by PTH. Here we discuss recent structural, cell signaling, and in vivo studies that unveil potential pharmacological outputs of the spatial versus temporal dimension of PTH1R signaling via cAMP. Notably, the combination of molecular dynamics simulations and elastic network model-based methods revealed how precise modulation of PTH signaling responses is achieved through structure-encoded allosteric coupling within the receptor and between the peptide hormone binding site and the G protein coupling interface. The implications of recent findings are now being explored for addressing key questions on how location bias in receptor signaling contributes to pharmacological functions, and how to drug a difficult target such as the PTH1R toward discovering nonpeptidic small molecule candidates for the treatment of metabolic bone and mineral diseases.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI