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Journal of Pharmacology And Experimental Therapeutics Fast Forward
First published on April 1, 2005; DOI: 10.1124/jpet.105.083121


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Received for publication January 25, 2005.
Revised March 25, 2005.
Accepted for publication March 31, 2005.

The origins of diversity and specificity in G protein- coupled receptor signaling

Stuart Maudsley 1*, Bronwen Martin 1, Louis M Luttrell 2

1 National Institute on Aging Intramural Research Program 2 Medical University of South Carolina

* Address correspondence to: E-mail: maudsleyst{at}grc.nia.nih.gov

Abstract

The modulation of transmembrane signaling by G protein- coupled receptors (GPCRs) constitutes the single most important therapeutic target in medicine. Drugs acting on GPCRs have traditionally been classified as agonists, partial agonists, or antagonists based on a two state model of receptor function embodied in the ternary complex model. Over the past decade, however, many lines of investigation have shown that GPCR signaling exhibits greater diversity and 'texture' than previously appreciated. Signal diversity arises from numerous factors, among them the ability of receptors to adopt multiple 'active' states with different effector coupling profiles, the formation of receptor dimers that exhibit unique pharmacology, signaling, and trafficking, the dissociation of receptor 'activation' from desensitization and internalization, and the discovery that non-G protein effectors mediate some aspects of GPCR signaling. At the same time, clustering of GPCRs with their downstream effectors in membrane microdomains, and interactions between receptors and a plethora of multidomain scaffolding proteins and accessory/chaperone molecules confers signal preorganization, efficiency, and specificity. In this context, the concept of agonist selective trafficking of receptor signaling, which recognizes that a bound ligand may select between a menu of 'active' receptor conformations and induce only a subset of the possible response profile, presents the opportunity to develop drugs that change the quality as well as the quantity of efficacy. As a more comprehensive understanding of the complexity of GPCR signaling is developed, the rational design of ligands possessing increased specific efficacy and attenuated side effects may become the standard mode of drug development.


Key words: G proteins, adrenergic pharmacology, desensitization, inverse agonism, receptor cross-talk, receptor theory


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