نتایج جستجو برای: rgs proteins

تعداد نتایج: 556426  

Journal: :physiology and pharmacology 0
simin namvar department of physiology, faculty of medical sciences, tarbiat modares university javad mirnajafi-zadeh department of physiology, faculty of medical sciences, tarbiat modares university mohammad javan department of physiology, faculty of medical sciences, tarbiat modares university maryam zeraati department of physiology, faculty of medical sciences, tarbiat modares university

introduction: application of low-frequency stimulation (lfs) is a new method for treatment of drug resistant epileptic patients. previous studies demonstrated that activation of receptors coupled to gi proteins is one of the mechanisms of the anticonvulsant effect of lfs. thus, in this study, alterations in the expression of rgs4 and rgs10 proteins, as negative regulators of gi proteins, were i...

2005
Evan L. Riddle Raúl A. Schwartzman Paul A. Insel Gerda Breitwieser Meredith Bond

Regulator of G-protein–signaling (RGS) proteins play a key role in the regulation of G-protein–coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling. The characteristic hallmark of RGS proteins is a conserved 120-aa RGS region that confers on these proteins the ability to serve as GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) for G proteins. Most RGS proteins can serve as GAPs for multiple isoforms of G and therefore have the...

Journal: :Annual review of pharmacology and toxicology 2000
L De Vries B Zheng T Fischer E Elenko M G Farquhar

Regulator of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins are responsible for the rapid turnoff of G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathways. The major mechanism whereby RGS proteins negatively regulate G proteins is via the GTPase activating protein activity of their RGS domain. Structural and mutational analyses have characterized the RGS/G alpha interaction in detail, explaining the molecular mech...

Journal: :Molecular pharmacology 2003
John R Hepler

G protein signaling pathways are essential for all aspects of cell and organ physiology, and the involved proteins have long served as primary drug targets. At the most basic level, these proteins include a signal-receiving G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), a transducing heterotrimeric G protein (G subunits), and a signal-generating downstream target effector. These proteins work together to t...

Journal: :Anesthesia and analgesia 2005
Guo-xi Xie Pamela Pierce Palmer

In this article we review recent advances in our understanding of the crucial role of the Regulator of G protein Signaling (RGS) proteins in opioid signaling mechanisms and opioid tolerance development. Opioids exert their physiologic effects via complex G protein-coupled receptor-signaling mechanisms, and RGS proteins are now known to tightly regulate the G protein signaling cycle. RGS protein...

Journal: :Current opinion in pharmacology 2007
Thomas Wieland Susanne Lutz Peter Chidiac

Regulator of G protein signalling (RGS) proteins are GTPase-activating proteins for heterotrimeric G protein alpha subunits, and are therefore physiologically and pathophysiologically important negative regulators of G-protein-coupled receptor signalling in the cardiovascular system. Owing to the functional redundancy of many of the 20 RGS, and more than 20 RGS-like, proteins even within a sing...

Journal: :Trends in pharmacological sciences 1999
J R Hepler

Regulators of G-protein signalling (RGS proteins) are a family of highly diverse, multifunctional signalling proteins that share a conserved 120 amino acid domain (RGS domain). RGS domains bind directly to activated Galpha subunits and act as GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) to attenuate and/or modulate hormone and neurotransmitter receptor-initiated signalling by both Galpha-GTP and Gbetagamm...

Journal: :Progress in molecular biology and translational science 2009
Dimitra Terzi Eugenia Stergiou Sarah L King Venetia Zachariou

Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) comprise a diverse group of about 40 proteins which determine signaling amplitude and duration via modulation of receptor/G protein or receptor/effector coupling. Several members of the RGS family are expressed in the brain, where they have precise roles in regulation of important physiological processes. The unique functions of each RGS can be attributed...

Journal: :Pharmacological reviews 2002
Susanne Hollinger John R Hepler

Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) and RGS-like proteins are a family (>30 members) of highly diverse, multifunctional signaling proteins that bind directly to activated G alpha subunits. Family members are defined by a shared RGS domain, which is responsible for G alpha binding and markedly stimulates the GTPase activity of G alpha subunits leading to their deactivation and termination of...

Journal: :Molecular pharmacology 2005
Richard J Ward Graeme Milligan

Mammalian regulator of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins are highly conserved within the RGS domain. Of amino acids that are universal, a serine residue at the C terminus of this domain has been described as the binding site in RGS7 for 14-3-3 proteins. However, studies with the related RGS3 indicate that the site of interaction is not within the RGS domain. We confirm that the interaction of ...

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