Bryan Roth, M.D., Ph.D., director of the National Institute of Mental Health’s psychoactive drug screening program at the University of North Carolina, suggests that the information printed in ...
GPCR dynamics, shown in purple as the human A 2A receptor, and elegant modifications in activation pathways (allostery) indicated by the blue arrow, are critical for enabling GPCRs to bind to multiple ...
GPCRs represent the largest family of genes expressed in the human genome, according to Jeremy Richman, Ph.D., associate director, cardiovascular biology, at Arena Pharmaceuticals. “Their cell ...
GPCRs are the largest receptor class, affecting almost every aspect of human physiology, with 35% of all approved drugs acting on GPCRs. They regulate sensory and neuronal signaling, as well as a ...