Term
What type of receptor mediated cellular responses are the fastest? |
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Definition
Generally ionoptoric receptor mediated responses. |
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Term
What is the most studied g-protein-coupled-receptor? |
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Definition
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Term
How are B2-adrenergic receptors inactivated? |
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Definition
By phosphorylation of serine and threonine residues in the third intracellular loop and the c-terminius. |
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Term
What subunit of a heterotrimeric g-protein is crucial for primary action? |
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Definition
The alpha subunit. Bacterial toxins target here. |
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Term
What to GTPase activating proteins (GAPs) do? |
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Definition
They help alpha subunits who don't have very good GTPase activity. |
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Term
How does amplification happen with GPCRs? |
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Definition
One GPCR can activate many g-proteins, and each alpha-GTP subunit can make a lot of second messenger molecule. |
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Term
What residues do protein kinases phosphorylate? |
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Definition
Serine or threonine residues |
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Term
What is conserved in many kinases? |
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Definition
The catalytic domain. The regulatory domains can be different. |
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Term
How are GPCRs uncoupled from g-protein activation? |
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Definition
A specific g-protein receptor kinase (GRK) gets phosphorylated or beta-arrestin binds to the third intracellular loop of the GPCR. |
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Term
What type of therapeutic interventions target GPCRs? |
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Definition
In Myasthenia gravis, antibodies block ACh receptor function. drugs can be use to inhibit acetylcholinesterase so that the synaptic concentration of ACh goes up. Remaining ACh receptors now have enough ACh to generate AP. |
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Term
What is the difference between Heterologous desensitization and Homologous desensitization? |
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Definition
Homologous desensitization only affects activated GPCRs. Heterologous desensitization affects both active AND inactive GPCRs (and steps in the signal cascade). |
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Term
What kind of mutation makes it hard for the alpha subunit to "turnoff" GTPase activity? |
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Definition
Missense mutations (to arginine 201 or glutamine 227). |
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Term
What type of mutations to GPCRs are recessive? |
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Definition
loss-of-function. Gain-of-function mutations are usually dominant. |
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Term
What is required for calmodulin activation? |
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Definition
Binding of 4 calcium ions. |
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Term
What removes the majority of calcium from the cytoplasm? |
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Definition
The sodium/calcium exchanger. These are found in the plasma membrane. |
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