[HTML][HTML] Towards improved receptor targeting: anterograde transport, internalization and postendocytic trafficking of neuropeptide Y receptors

S Babilon, K Mörl, AG Beck-Sickinger - Biological chemistry, 2013 - degruyter.com
S Babilon, K Mörl, AG Beck-Sickinger
Biological chemistry, 2013degruyter.com
The neuropeptide Y system is known to be involved in the regulation of many central
physiological and pathophysiological processes, such as energy homeostasis, obesity,
cancer, mood disorders and epilepsy. Four Y receptor subtypes have been cloned from
human tissue (hY1, hY2, hY4 and hY5) that form a multiligand/multireceptor system together
with their three peptidic agonists (NPY, PYY and PP). Addressing this system for medical
application requires on the one hand detailed information about the receptor-ligand …
Abstract
The neuropeptide Y system is known to be involved in the regulation of many central physiological and pathophysiological processes, such as energy homeostasis, obesity, cancer, mood disorders and epilepsy. Four Y receptor subtypes have been cloned from human tissue (hY1, hY2, hY4 and hY5) that form a multiligand/multireceptor system together with their three peptidic agonists (NPY, PYY and PP). Addressing this system for medical application requires on the one hand detailed information about the receptor-ligand interaction to design subtype-selective compounds. On the other hand comprehensive knowledge about alternative receptor signaling, as well as desensitization, localization and downregulation is crucial to circumvent the development of undesired side-effects and drug resistance. By bringing such knowledge together, highly potent and long-lasting drugs with minimized side-effects can be engineered. Here, current knowledge about Y receptor export, internalization, recycling, and degradation is summarized, with a focus on the human Y receptor subtypes, and is discussed in terms of its impact on therapeutic application.
De Gruyter