[HTML][HTML] Protein modules as organizers of membrane structure

AS Fanning, JM Anderson - Current opinion in cell biology, 1999 - Elsevier
Current opinion in cell biology, 1999Elsevier
Investigations conducted over the past 18 months have shed new light on how modular
protein-binding domains, in particular PDZ domains, co-ordinate the assembly of functional
plasma membrane domains. Members of the MAGUK (membrane-associated guanylate
kinase) protein family, like PSD-95, use multiple domains to cluster ion channels, receptors,
adhesion molecules and cytosolic signaling proteins at synapses, cellular junctions, and
polarized membrane domains. Other PDZ proteins, like the Drosophila protein INAD and the …
Investigations conducted over the past 18 months have shed new light on how modular protein-binding domains, in particular PDZ domains, co-ordinate the assembly of functional plasma membrane domains. Members of the MAGUK (membrane-associated guanylate kinase) protein family, like PSD-95, use multiple domains to cluster ion channels, receptors, adhesion molecules and cytosolic signaling proteins at synapses, cellular junctions, and polarized membrane domains. Other PDZ proteins, like the Drosophila protein INAD and the epithelial Na+/H+ regulatory factor (NHERF), organize cellular signaling by localizing transmembrane and cytosolic components to specific membrane domains and assembling these components into functional complexes. The organization of these proteins into discreet structures has functional consequences for downstream signaling.
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