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Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica ; (12): 66-72, 2019.
Artigo em Chinês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-778671

RESUMO

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) are a class of receptor superfamily that exist on the surface of cell membrane. With the intensive studies on the GPCR desensitization regulator—β-arrestins, it is found that activated GPCR can not only conduct signal transduction through G protein-dependent pathway, but also mediate via non-G protein-dependent pathway. In addition to mediate endocytosis and desensitization, β-arrestins also initiate a new series of signal transduction events. Therefore, the concept of "biased transduction" was put forward: the receptor activated by a specific ligand could selectively activate a specific signaling pathway, leading the signal to be transmitted downstream along a "preferential" pathway. We call the ligand that binds to the receptor and causes biased activation "biased ligand". It is generally believed that the phenomenon of bias results from different binding modes of ligands and receptors, including multiple receptor conformations, diverse sites that downstream signal proteins bind, and signal proteins’ own conformations, etc. Here we give a brief review focusing on the mechanisms of β-arrestin-biased GPCR signal transduction and the advances in the drug development on β-arrestin biased ligands.

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