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How palmitoylation affects trafficking and signaling of membrane receptors

Maxime Jansen, Bruno Beaumelle

2021Biology of the Cell28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

S-acylation (or palmitoylation) is a reversible post-translational modification (PTM) that modulates protein activity, signalization and trafficking. Palmitoylation was found to significantly impact the activity of various membrane receptors involved in either pathogen entry, such as CCR5 (for HIV) and anthrax toxin receptors, cell proliferation (epidermal growth factor receptor), cardiac function (β-Adrenergic receptor), or synaptic function (AMPA receptor). Palmitoylation of these membrane receptors indeed affects not only their internalization, localization, and activation, but also other PTMs such as phosphorylation. In this review, we discuss recent results showing how palmitoylation differently affects the biology of these membrane receptors.

Topics & Concepts

PalmitoylationBiologyCell biologyReceptorAMPA receptorG protein-coupled receptorInternalizationSignal transductionBiochemistryGlutamate receptorCysteineEnzymeReceptor Mechanisms and SignalingProtein Kinase Regulation and GTPase SignalingCholesterol and Lipid Metabolism
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