Results 311 to 320 of about 601,530 (360)
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This is not a G protein-coupled receptor
Trends in Pharmacological Sciences, 1993On his canvas entitled 'La trahison des Images' ('The Perfidy of Images'), René Magritte painted a tobacco pipe in a very realistic manner and added the words: 'Ceci n'est pas une pipe' ('This is not a pipe'). In similar style, it is of prime importance to state that the first three-dimensional (3D) models of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that ...
Marcel Hibert+3 more
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2008
G-Protein-coupled receptors mediate many of the hypnotic and analgesic actions of the drugs employed in anesthesia. Notably, opioid agonists represent the most successful and efficacious class of analgesic agents employed over the last century. Also, major clinical advances have been made by the study of alpha(2) adrenoceptor agonists, which possess ...
R D, Sanders, D, Brian, M, Maze
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G-Protein-coupled receptors mediate many of the hypnotic and analgesic actions of the drugs employed in anesthesia. Notably, opioid agonists represent the most successful and efficacious class of analgesic agents employed over the last century. Also, major clinical advances have been made by the study of alpha(2) adrenoceptor agonists, which possess ...
R D, Sanders, D, Brian, M, Maze
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Pharmacogenetics of the G Protein-Coupled Receptors
2014Pharmacogenetics investigates the influence of genetic variants on physiological phenotypes related to drug response and disease, while pharmacogenomics takes a genome-wide approach to advancing this knowledge. Both play an important role in identifying responders and nonresponders to medication, avoiding adverse drug reactions, and optimizing drug ...
M. D. Thompson+6 more
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G Protein-Coupled Receptor Pharmacogenetics [PDF]
Common G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) gene variants that encode receptor proteins with a distinct sequence may alter drug efficacy without always resulting in a disease phenotype. GPCR genetic loci harbor numerous variants, such as DNA insertions or deletions and single-nucleotide polymorphisms that alter GPCR expression and function, thereby ...
Katherine A. Siminovitch+2 more
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G-protein-coupled receptors and cancer [PDF]
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), the largest family of cell-surface molecules involved in signal transmission, have recently emerged as crucial players in tumour growth and metastasis. Malignant cells often hijack the normal physiological functions of GPCRs to survive, proliferate autonomously, evade the immune system, increase their blood supply ...
Robert T. Dorsam, J. Silvio Gutkind
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G protein-coupled receptors in rheumatology
Nature Reviews Rheumatology, 2014G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are transmembrane receptor proteins that allow the transfer of signals across the cell membrane. In addition to their physiological role, GPCRs are involved in many pathophysiological processes including pathways relevant in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), osteoarthritis (OA) and psoriatic arthritis.
Elena Neumann+2 more
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2012
G protein coupled receptors play an important role due to physiological and pathophysiological processes and are responsible for signal transduction in the cell. Furthermore, about 30 % of drugs, present on market, address G protein coupled receptors. First, the families for classification of G protein coupled receptors are presented.
Andrea Strasser, Hans-Joachim Wittmann
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G protein coupled receptors play an important role due to physiological and pathophysiological processes and are responsible for signal transduction in the cell. Furthermore, about 30 % of drugs, present on market, address G protein coupled receptors. First, the families for classification of G protein coupled receptors are presented.
Andrea Strasser, Hans-Joachim Wittmann
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Dimerization of G-Protein-Coupled Receptors
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2001The evolutionary trace (ET) method, a data mining approach for determining significant levels of amino acid conservation, has been applied to over 700 aligned G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) sequences. The method predicted the occurrence of functionally important clusters of residues on the external faces of helices 5 and 6 for each family or ...
Christopher Higgs+8 more
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G‐protein‐coupled receptors: an update
Acta Physiologica, 2007Abstract The receptors that couple to G proteins (GPCR) and which span the cell membranes seven times (7‐TM receptors) were the focus of a symposium in Stockholm 2006. The ensemble of GPCR has now been mapped in several animal species. They remain a major focus of interest in drug development, and their diverse physiological and pathophysiological ...
T. Hökfelt+2 more
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Science's STKE, 2005
This Teaching Resource provides lecture notes and slides for a class covering G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) and is part of the course "Cell Signaling Systems: A Course for Graduate Students." The lecture begins with a discussion of the major classes of GPCRs and then proceeds to describe the mechanisms of receptor diversity, ligand interaction ...
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This Teaching Resource provides lecture notes and slides for a class covering G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) and is part of the course "Cell Signaling Systems: A Course for Graduate Students." The lecture begins with a discussion of the major classes of GPCRs and then proceeds to describe the mechanisms of receptor diversity, ligand interaction ...
openaire +2 more sources