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    Nature. 1997 Jul 17;388(6639):243-9.

    A multivalent PDZ-domain protein assembles signalling complexes in a G-protein-coupled cascade.

    Source

    Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and Department of Biology, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0649, USA.

    Abstract

    How are signalling molecules organized into different pathways within the same cell? In Drosophila, the inaD gene encodes a protein consisting of five PDZ domains which serves as a scaffold to assemble different components of the phototransduction cascade, including the principal light-activated ion channels, the effector phospholipase C-beta and protein kinase C. Null inaD mutants have a dramatically reorganized subcellular distribution of signalling molecules, and a total loss of transduction complexes. Also, mutants defective in a single PDZ domain produce signalling complexes that lack the target protein and display corresponding defects in their physiology. A picture emerges of a highly organized unit of signalling, a 'transduclisome', with PDZ domains functioning as key elements in the organization of transduction complexes in vivo.

    PMID:
    9230432
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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