Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism
Volume 9, Issue 1, January–February 1998, Pages 27-31
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Constitutively Signaling G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and Human Disease

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Abstract

Dysregulation of G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) function has been shown to be associated with a growing number of human diseases. In some diseases, mutation of an endogenous GPCR causes the receptor to lose the ability to bind agonist or signal (`loss of function' mutation), whereas another mutation causes the receptor to be in an active state in the absence of agonist (`gain of function' mutation), leading to `constitutive signaling activity'. A number of constitutively active GPCRs are tumorigenic in vitro and in animal models, and cause syndromes of hyperfunction and/or tumors in humans. The recent characterization of a constitutively active GPCR in the genome of a disease-associated, human herpesvirus provides a potential novel mechanism for viral tumorigenesis.

Keywords

G protein-coupled receptor
constitive signaling
mutated receptors
virally encoded receptors
receptor hyperfunction
tumorigenesis

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