The dependence receptor hypothesis

P Mehlen, DE Bredesen - Apoptosis, 2004 - Springer
P Mehlen, DE Bredesen
Apoptosis, 2004Springer
A new family of functionally-related receptors has recently been proposed, dubbed
dependence receptors. These proteins, only some of which share sequence similarities,
display the common property that they transduce two different intracellular signals: in the
presence of ligand, these receptors transduce a positive signal leading to survival,
differentiation or migration; conversely, in the absence of ligand, the receptors initiate or
amplify a signal for programmed cell death. Thus cells that express these proteins at …
Abstract
A new family of functionally-related receptors has recently been proposed, dubbed dependence receptors. These proteins, only some of which share sequence similarities, display the common property that they transduce two different intracellular signals: in the presence of ligand, these receptors transduce a positive signal leading to survival, differentiation or migration; conversely, in the absence of ligand, the receptors initiate or amplify a signal for programmed cell death. Thus cells that express these proteins at sufficient concentrations manifest a state of dependence on their respective ligands. The signaling that mediates cell death induction upon ligand withdrawal is in large part uncharacterized, but typically includes a required interaction with, and cleavage by, specific caspases. Here, we review the current knowledge concerning dependence receptors, including the shared mechanisms for cell death induction and their potential relevance in nervous system development and regulation of tumorigenesis.
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