Protease-Activated Receptors: Contribution to Physiology and Disease
University of California, San Francisco
Abstract
Proteases acting at the surface of cells generate and destroy receptor agonists and activate and inactivate receptors, thereby making a vitally important contribution to signal transduction. Certain serine proteases that derive from the circulation (e.g., coagulation factors), inflammatory cells (e.g., mast cell and neutrophil proteases), and from multiple other sources (e.g., epithelial cells, neurons, bacteria, fungi) can cleave protease-activated receptors (PARs), a family of four G protein-coupled receptors. Cleavage within the extracellular amino terminus exposes a tethered ligand domain, which binds to and activates the receptors to initiate multiple signaling cascades. Despite this irreversible…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 39.17
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 325
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Proteases
- Protease-activated receptor
- Cell biology
- Receptor
- Biology
- Signal transduction
- Protease-activated receptor 2
- Protease
- Good health and well-being