Structure/function studies of S100A8/A9
Data(s) |
01/01/1999
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Resumo |
The functional importance of members of the S100 Ca2+-binding protein family is recently emerging. A variety of activities, several of which are apparently opposing, are attributed to S100A8, a protein implicated in embryogenesis, growth, differentiation, and immune and inflammatory processes. Murine (m) S100A8 was initially described as a chemoattractant (CP-10) for myeloid cells. It is coordinately expressed with mS100A9 (MRP14) in neutrophils and the non-covalent heterodimer is presumed to be the functional intracellular species. The extracellular chemotactic activity of mS100A8, however, is not dependent on mS100A9 and occurs at concentrations (10(-13)-10(-11) M) at which the non-covalent heterodimer would probably dissociate. This review focuses on the structure and post-translational modifications of mS100A8/A9 and their effects on function, particularly chemotaxis. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Kluwer Academic Publishers |
Palavras-Chave | #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Chemotaxis #Inflammation #Oxidation #Post-translational #S100 #Calcium-binding Protein #Ionization Mass-spectrometry #Alpha-alpha Protein #S100 Protein #Bovine Brain #Monocytic Differentiation #Signal-transduction #Chemotactic Protein #Neurite Extension #Complex-formation #C1 #780105 Biological sciences #270103 Protein Targeting and Signal Transduction |
Tipo |
Journal Article |