Abstract

BackgroundThe Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are membrane-bound receptors with long N termini. This family has 33 members in humans. Several Adhesion GPCRs are known to have important physiological functions in CNS development and immune system response mediated by large cell surface ligands. However, the majority of Adhesion GPCRs are still poorly studied orphans with unknown functions.ResultsIn this study we performed the extensive tissue localization analysis of the entire Adhesion GPCR family in rat and mouse. By applying the quantitative real-time PCR technique we have produced comparable expression profile for each of the members in the Adhesion family. The results are compared with literature data and data from the Allen Brain Atlas project. Our results suggest that the majority of the Adhesion GPCRs are either expressed in the CNS or ubiquitously. In addition the Adhesion GPCRs from the same phylogenetic group have either predominant CNS or peripheral expression, although each of their expression profile is unique.ConclusionOur findings indicate that many of Adhesion GPCRs are expressed, and most probably, have function in CNS. The related Adhesion GPCRs are well conserved in their structure and interestingly have considerable overlap in their expression profiles, suggesting similarities among the physiological roles for members within many of the phylogenetically related clusters.

Highlights

  • The Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are membrane-bound receptors with long N termini

  • The mouse Adhesion GPCR gene sequences were downloaded from GenBank (Additional File 2) and 7TM regions were identified with Conserved Domain Database [24]

  • Relative expression values displayed as a fold increase from the detected minimum expression for rat and mouse Adhesion GPCRs are presented in Figures 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7

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Summary

Introduction

The Adhesion G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are membrane-bound receptors with long N termini. This family has 33 members in humans. The Adhesion GPCRs, known as long Nterminal seven transmembrane receptors related to family B (LNB-TM7) and epidermal growth factor seven transmembrane (EGF-TM7) receptors. This family is the second largest GPCR family with 33 members in humans and 30 members in mice and rats. The Adhesion receptors are characterized by long N-termini with complex domain architecture including GPCR proteolytic site (GPS), epidermal growth factor, thrombospondin, pentraxin, immunoglobulin, olfactomedin, cadherin domains [2]. The genes coding for Adhesion GPCRs are difficult to study due to their complex genomic structure and a large number of exons

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