Transmembrane (cell surface) receptors

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Serotonin '''5-HT2C receptors''' are targets for treatment of depressive and anxious states. 5-HT2C receptors may be involved in the effects of corticosterone-induced hyperphagia.
Serotonin '''5-HT2C receptors''' are targets for treatment of depressive and anxious states. 5-HT2C receptors may be involved in the effects of corticosterone-induced hyperphagia.
*[[Adrenergic receptor|Adrenergic receptors in general]]
*[[Adrenergic receptor|Adrenergic receptors in general]]
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<scene name='44/448705/1/2' target='main'>Click here to see transition from active to inactive conformation of alpha adrenergic receptor</scene> (morph was taken from [http://molmovdb.org/cgi-bin/movie.cgi Gallery of Morphs] of the [http://molmovdb.org Yale Morph Server]).
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*[[UMass Chem 423 Student Projects 2011-1#Beta-1 Adrenergic GPCR|Beta-1 Adrenergic receptor]]
*[[UMass Chem 423 Student Projects 2011-1#Beta-1 Adrenergic GPCR|Beta-1 Adrenergic receptor]]
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β-1 Adrenergic receptor is <scene name='Sandbox226/Two_dimers/1'>homodimer</scene>. Just as is true of most GPCRs, the dimers are each made up of 7 <scene name='Sandbox226/Helices_and_ligands/2'>α-helices with different ligands</scene>, all of which must span the membrane; the α-helices are connected by external and internal loops and are connected in an <scene name='Sandbox226/Antiparallel_representation/1'>anti-parallel</scene> form. For these α-helices to be stable, their middle must be made up of mostly hydrophobic amino acids while their ends are hydrophilic. In this <scene name='Sandbox226/Hydrophobic_and_polar_aas/1'>scene</scene>, hydrophobic amino acids are colored grey, while polar amino acids are purple. Though some polar amino acids exist on the middle of the helices, they are also mostly on the interior of the helix. This keeps them from being exposed to the lipid membrane and destabilizing the protein. The
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β-1 Adrenergic receptor is homodimer. Just as is true of most GPCRs, the dimers are each made up of 7 <scene name='Sandbox226/Helices_and_ligands/2'>α-helices with different ligands</scene>, all of which must span the membrane; the α-helices are connected by external and internal loops and are connected in an <scene name='Sandbox226/Antiparallel_representation/1'>anti-parallel</scene> form. For these α-helices to be stable, their middle must be made up of mostly hydrophobic amino acids while their ends are hydrophilic. In this <scene name='Sandbox226/Hydrophobic_and_polar_aas/1'>scene</scene>, hydrophobic amino acids are colored grey, while polar amino acids are purple. Though some polar amino acids exist on the middle of the helices, they are also mostly on the interior of the helix. This keeps them from being exposed to the lipid membrane and destabilizing the protein. The
<scene name='Sandbox226/Hydrogen_bonds/1'>hydrogen bonds</scene> (in white) are all between the amino acids in the α-helices and not from interactions with the ligand. The ligand to the protein must also have these similar qualities, or else it would not be able exist within the membrane. As seen in this <scene name='Sandbox226/Ligand_ball_and_stick/1'>scene</scene>, the ligand consists of hydrocarbon chains and rings in the center with nitrogen (blue) and oxygen (red) atoms only existing on the ends. This gives the ligands a very similar structure to the membrane, with a hydrophobic center and polar ends. Most of the ligands exist <scene name='Sandbox226/Ligand_with_protein/1'>between the 2 dimers</scene>, allowing them to participate in binding along with the protein.
<scene name='Sandbox226/Hydrogen_bonds/1'>hydrogen bonds</scene> (in white) are all between the amino acids in the α-helices and not from interactions with the ligand. The ligand to the protein must also have these similar qualities, or else it would not be able exist within the membrane. As seen in this <scene name='Sandbox226/Ligand_ball_and_stick/1'>scene</scene>, the ligand consists of hydrocarbon chains and rings in the center with nitrogen (blue) and oxygen (red) atoms only existing on the ends. This gives the ligands a very similar structure to the membrane, with a hydrophobic center and polar ends. Most of the ligands exist <scene name='Sandbox226/Ligand_with_protein/1'>between the 2 dimers</scene>, allowing them to participate in binding along with the protein.
*Dobutamine: [[UMass Chem 423 Student Projects 2011-1#Beta-1 Adrenergic GPCR|Beta-1 Adrenergic receptor]], [[2y00]], [[2y01]], [[6h7l]]
*Dobutamine: [[UMass Chem 423 Student Projects 2011-1#Beta-1 Adrenergic GPCR|Beta-1 Adrenergic receptor]], [[2y00]], [[2y01]], [[6h7l]]
*Isoprenaline: [[UMass Chem 423 Student Projects 2011-1#Beta-1 Adrenergic GPCR|Beta-1 Adrenergic receptor]], [[2y03]]
*Isoprenaline: [[UMass Chem 423 Student Projects 2011-1#Beta-1 Adrenergic GPCR|Beta-1 Adrenergic receptor]], [[2y03]]
*Carmoterol: [[2y02]]
*Carmoterol: [[2y02]]
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*Salbutamol: [[2y04]]
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*[[Salbutamol]]: [[2y04]]
*[[Beta-2 Adrenergic Receptor|Article Beta-2 Adrenergic Receptor by Wayne Decatur, David Canner, Dotan Shaniv, Joel L. Sussman, Michal Harel]]
*[[Beta-2 Adrenergic Receptor|Article Beta-2 Adrenergic Receptor by Wayne Decatur, David Canner, Dotan Shaniv, Joel L. Sussman, Michal Harel]]
*[[Beta-2 adrenergic receptor|Article Beta-2 adrenergic receptor by Joel L. Sussman, Tala Curry, Michal Harel, Jaime Prilusky]]
*[[Beta-2 adrenergic receptor|Article Beta-2 adrenergic receptor by Joel L. Sussman, Tala Curry, Michal Harel, Jaime Prilusky]]
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LDLR consists of a ligand-binding domain (LBD residues 1-292), epidermal growth factor precursor homology domain (EGFP residues 293-699), oligosaccharide-rich domain (residues 700-758), membrane-spanning domain (residues 759-781) and cytoplasmic domain (residues 782-832). LDLR LBD contains 7 ca. 40 amino acid long repeats (LB1 residues 20-67; LB2 residues 55-104; LB3 residues 105-143; LB4 residues 144-196; LB5 residues 196-232; LB6 residues 234-272) containing 6 cysteine residues, making a calcium binding octahedral structure. LDLR EGFP contains 2 EGF repeats followed by 6 <scene name='54/545853/Cv/8'>YWTD repeats</scene> and another EGF repeat. LDLR LBD residues 133-273 are named C-type lectin-like domain.
LDLR consists of a ligand-binding domain (LBD residues 1-292), epidermal growth factor precursor homology domain (EGFP residues 293-699), oligosaccharide-rich domain (residues 700-758), membrane-spanning domain (residues 759-781) and cytoplasmic domain (residues 782-832). LDLR LBD contains 7 ca. 40 amino acid long repeats (LB1 residues 20-67; LB2 residues 55-104; LB3 residues 105-143; LB4 residues 144-196; LB5 residues 196-232; LB6 residues 234-272) containing 6 cysteine residues, making a calcium binding octahedral structure. LDLR EGFP contains 2 EGF repeats followed by 6 <scene name='54/545853/Cv/8'>YWTD repeats</scene> and another EGF repeat. LDLR LBD residues 133-273 are named C-type lectin-like domain.
==[[Transferrin receptor]]==
==[[Transferrin receptor]]==
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<scene name='48/485628/Cv/3'>Human transferrin receptor ectodomain dimer complex with transferrin N-lobe and C-lobe</scene> ([[1suv]]).
See also [[Receptor]]
See also [[Receptor]]

Current revision

Structure of κ-opioid receptor complex with opioid antagonist, citric acid, PEG and octadec-enoate derivative (PDB entry 4djh)

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References

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Alexander Berchansky

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