Receptors and membrane biology are critical areas of study in understanding how cells communicate and interact with their environment. Receptors, particularly G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs ...
ERBB receptors are regulated by their own intrinsic properties as well as by external associated proteins. What is regulation, where does it occur on the receptor, and how do scientists study it?
Thomas Sollner (University of Munich): "The complex organization of eucaryotic cells into various membrane ... This is the first mitochondrial outer-membrane protein fulfilling the criteria proposed ...
His team then extracted the receptor from the cell membrane and forged an initial understanding of ... This family is now known as G-protein-coupled receptors, and the studies by Lefkowitz and Kobilka ...
EPFL researchers have developed a computational method to explicitly consider the impact of water while designing membrane receptors with enhanced stability and signaling, paving the way for novel ...
Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (aGPCRs ... The extracellular region of an aGPCR extends from the cell membrane into space outside the cell, where it can bind to molecules and receptors ...
Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are a group of cell-surface sensors associated with many body functions and diseases. However, they are not yet sufficiently understood to be exploited for ...
Proteins are life's engines, powering processes like muscle movement, vision, and chemical reactions. Their environments-water, lipid membranes, or other condensed phases-are critical to their ...
Proteins are life's engines, powering processes like muscle movement, vision, and chemical reactions. Their environments—water, lipid membranes, or other condensed phases—are critical to their ...
mechanism of outer membrane fusion and the social and evolutionary consequences of OME. Fig. 3. Self-recognition among a wide range of myxobacteria is governed by sequence variability in the TraA cell ...
For years, scientists have thought that TGF-Beta, a signaling protein that holds ... to activate a neighboring receptor ...