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Ocular albinism: evidence for a defect in an intracellular signal transduction system

Authors :
Cinzia Baschirotto
Andrea Ballabio
M. Vittoria Schiaffino
Cristina Colla
M. Teresa Bassi
Claudia Puri
Marilena d’Addio
Anna Alloni
Caterina Valetti
Carlo Tacchetti
Michele De Luca
Katia Cortese
Schiaffino, Mv
D'Addio, M
Alloni, A
Baschirotto, C
Valetti, C
Cortese, K
Puri, C
Bassi, Mt
Colla, C
DE LUCA, M
Tacchetti, C
Ballabio, Andrea
K., Cortese
Tacchetti, Carlo
Ballabio, A.
Source :
Nature Genetics. 23:108-112
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1999.

Abstract

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) participate in the most common signal transduction system at the plasma membrane1. The wide distribution of heterotrimeric G proteins in the internal membranes suggests that a similar signalling mechanism might also be used at intracellular locations2. We provide here structural evidence that the protein product of the ocular albinism type 1 gene (OA1), a pigment cell-specific integral membrane glycoprotein3, represents a novel member of the GPCR superfamily and demonstrate that it binds heterotrimeric G proteins. Moreover, we show that OA1 is not found at the plasma membrane, being instead targeted to specialized intracellular organelles, the melanosomes. Our data suggest that OA1 represents the first example of an exclusively intracellular GPCR and support the hypothesis that GPCR-mediated signal transduction systems also operate at the internal membranes in mammalian cells.

Details

ISSN :
15461718 and 10614036
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba1e9e42f36ede7a8abbbc2472eafb43