Scavenger receptor

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Scavenger receptors are a group of receptors that recognize modified low-density lipoprotein[1] (LDL) by oxidation or acetylation. This naming is based on a function of cleaning (scavenging): Scavenger receptors widely recognize and take up macromolecules that have a negative charge, like modified LDL.

Function

It is thought that scavenger receptors participate in the removal of many foreign substances and waste materials in the living body by extensive ligand specificity and a variety of receptor molecules.

In atherosclerotic lesions, macrophages that express scavenger receptors on their plasma membrane take up the oxidized LDL deposited in the blood vessel wall aggressively, and develop into foam cells. Likewise they secrete various inflammatory cytokines and accelerate the development of atherosclerosis.

Types

Scavenger receptors are categorized into classes A, B, and C according to their structural characteristics.

Class A

Scavenger receptors type 1 (SR-A1) and 2 (SR-A2) are trimers with a molecular weight of about 220-250 kDa (the molecular weight of monomeric protein is about 80 kDa). They preferentially bind modified LDL, either acylated (acLDL) or oxidized (oxLDL). They have a collagen-like domain, which is essential for ligand binding.

Members include:

  • SCARA1 or MSR1: SR-A1 scavenger receptors have a cysteine-rich domain, which can be found in a series of cell surface receptors and soluble proteins, but SR-A2 do not.
  • SCARA2 or MARCO: Another scavenger receptor class A, MARCO, has collagen-like and cysteine-rich domains.
  • SCARA3
  • SCARA4 or COLEC12
  • SCARA5

Class B

CD36 and scavenger receptor class BI (SR-BI) are identified as oxidized LDL receptors and classified into class B. Both proteins have two transmembrane domains, and they are concentrated in a specific plasma membrane microdomain, the caveolae.

Members include:

  • SCARB1. SR-BI can interact not only with oxidized LDL but also with normal LDL and high-density lipoproteins (HDL). Recent studies have indicated that SR-BI is likely to be the major receptor involved in HDL metabolism in mice and humans.[3][4]
  • SCARB2
  • SCARB3 or CD36. CD36 has been thought to be implicated in cell adhesion, in the phagocytosis of apoptotic cells, and in the metabolism of long-chain fatty acids. In experimental mice models of atherosclerosis in which the gene for CD36 has been deleted, the mice have a greatly reduced number of atherosclerotic lesions.[5]

Other

Some receptors that can bind to oxidized LDL have been discovered.

References

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External links

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