趋化因子受体
G蛋白偶联受体
CCR1
趋化因子受体
CCL21型
生物
趋化因子
受体
视紫红质样受体
细胞生物学
CCR3
趋化因子受体CCR5
信号转导
生物化学
代谢受体
兴奋剂
作者
Sandra Kraemer,Sadegh Rajabi,Omar El Bounkari,Jürgen Bernhagen
标识
DOI:10.2174/09298673113209990117
摘要
The G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family of membrane receptors encompasses over 1000 members, representing the largest known receptor family, with a variety of structurally different ligands. GPCRs are favorite targets for drug development in numerous diseases. Chemokine receptors are an important GPCR sub-class and are known to play a crucial role in the regulation of multiple physiological and various pathophysiological processes, including inflammation, atherosclerosis, cancer, and viral infections. Chemokine receptor activation is controlled by some 50 chemokine ligands which often act in a redundant and overlapping manner, enabling for a complex regulatory system together controlling and fine-tuning the specificity and spatio-temporal properties of the response. Recent findings have indicated that additionally the organization of chemokine receptors on the cell surface could be critical for driving their biological effects. In fact, chemokine receptors have increasingly been found to organize into homo- or hetero-oligomeric complexes, in part in a ligand-inducible manner, resulting in complex networks and crosstalk with other orthogonal signaling complexes. There has even been evidence for heterologous complex formation between chemokine receptors and non-chemokine receptor G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), and even non-GPCRs. However, the functional consequences of this kind of oligomerization have remained poorly understood, even for the chemokine receptor homo-oligomers. Yet, there is growing evidence that targeting homo- and/or hetero-oligomerization of chemokine receptors might be beneficial for the development of novel and specific therapeutics. In the present article, we highlight the multi-faceted complexity of chemokine receptor structures with a focus on their hetero-oligomerization properties. Keywords: GPCR, homo-dimerization, hetero-dimerization, CXC chemokine, CC chemokine, MIF receptors, crosstalk, signaling.
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