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Significance of P2X7 Receptor Variants to Human Health and Disease

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posted on 2024-11-14, 04:50 authored by Ronald SluyterRonald Sluyter, Leanne Stokes
The human P2X7 receptor is a trimeric ligand-gated cation channel coded by the P2RX7 gene located at chromosome position 12q24. P2X7 is expressed in a wide variety of normal and disease-associated cell types. Activation of this receptor by extracellular adenosine 5’-triphosphate results in numerous downstream events including the release of pro-inflammatory mediators, cell proliferation or death, and killing of intracellular pathogens. As a result, P2X7 plays important roles in inflammation, immunity, bone homeostasis, neurological function and neoplasia. The P2RX7 gene encodes a P2X7 subunit 595 amino acids in length, however splice isoforms that can alter receptor expression and function, and modify the signaling properties downstream of receptor activation also exist. Moreover, the relative amount of P2X7 function varies between human individuals due to numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms resulting in either loss- or gain-of-function. Combinations of these polymorphisms give rise to various haplotypes that can also modify P2X7 function. Collectively, P2X7, and its splice and polymorphic variants are attracting considerable interest in relation to human health and disease, including the development and publication of a number of patents.

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Citation

Ronald Sluyter and Leanne Stokes, Significance of P2X7 receptor variants to human health and disease, Recent Patents on DNA & Gene Sequences, 5, 2011, 41-54.

Journal title

Recent Patents on DNA & Gene Sequences

Volume

5

Issue

1

Pagination

41-54

Language

English

RIS ID

36074

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