Search results for "Protein maturation"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

L1 syndrome diagnosis complemented with functional analysis of L1CAM variants located to the two N-terminal Ig-like domains

2016

L1CAM gene mutations cause neurodevelopmental disorders collectively termed L1 syndrome. Insufficient information about L1CAM variants complicates clinical prognosis, genetic diagnosis and genetic counseling. We combined clinical data, in silico effect predictions and functional analysis of four L1CAM variants, p.I37N, p.T38M, p.M172I and p.D202Y, located to the two N-terminal Ig-like domains present in five families with symptoms of L1 syndrome. Software tools predicted destabilizing effects of p.I37N and p.D202Y but results for p.T38M and p.M172I were inconsistent. Cell surface expression of mutant proteins L1-T38M, L1-M172I and L1-D202Y was normal. Conversely, L1-I37N accumulated in the …

0301 basic medicineGeneticsmedicine.medical_specialtyL1In silicoEndoplasmic reticulumMutantBiologymedicine.disease03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineNeurodevelopmental disorderGeneticsmedicineMedical geneticsProtein foldingProtein maturation030217 neurology & neurosurgeryGenetics (clinical)Clinical Genetics
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New functions and signaling mechanisms for the class of adhesion G protein-coupled receptors

2014

The class of adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (aGPCRs), with 33 human homologs, is the second largest family of GPCRs. In addition to a seven-transmembrane α-helix-a structural feature of all GPCRs-the class of aGPCRs is characterized by the presence of a large N-terminal extracellular region. In addition, all aGPCRs but one (GPR123) contain a GPCR autoproteolysis-inducing (GAIN) domain that mediates autoproteolytic cleavage at the GPCR autoproteolysis site motif to generate N- and a C-terminal fragments (NTF and CTF, respectively) during protein maturation. Subsequently, the NTF and CTF are associated noncovalently as a heterodimer at the plasma membrane. While the biological function …

History and Philosophy of ScienceStructural biologyGeneral NeuroscienceExtracellularSignal transductionBiologyCell adhesionReceptorProtein maturationGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyFunction (biology)G protein-coupled receptorCell biologyAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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