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Phosphoinositide phospholipase C

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Phospholipase C
Phospholipase Cδ-1
Identifiers
SymbolPLCL1
Alt. symbolsPLC-L, PLCL
NCBI gene5334
HGNC9063
OMIM600597
PDB1AH7
RefSeqNM_006226
UniProtQ15111
Other data
EC number3.1.4.3
LocusChr. 2 q33
Search for
StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

Phospholipase C is a key enzyme in phosphatidylinositol (PIP2) metabolism and lipid signaling pathways.

Activation

It is activated by either Gαq or Gβγ G-protein subunits (making it part of a G protein-coupled receptor signal transduction pathway) or by transmembrane receptors with intrinsic or associated tyrosine kinase activity.

Function

It hydrolyzes PIP2, a phosphatidylinositol, into two second messengers, inositol triphosphate (IP3) and diacylglycerol (DAG), which then go on to modulate the activity of downstream proteins during cellular signalling, e.g. calcium channels in the endoplasmic reticulum of various cell types and protein kinase C, respectively.

Isozymes

The Phospholipase C family consists of 13 isozymes split between six subfamilies, PLC-δ, -β, -γ, -ε, -ζ, and the recently discovered -η isoform. The molecular weights of each being 85kDa for the δ form, 120-155kDa for both the β and γ forms, and 230-260kDa for the ε form. They all require calcium for catalytic activity, although the only isoform which is known to be inactive at basal intracellular calcium levels is the δ subfamily of enzymes.

  • PLC-δ is activated by high calcium levels and binding to PIP2 through its PH domain. It is also thought to be the archetypical PLC.
  • PLC-β is activated by G protein subunits.
  • PLC-γ is activated by receptor tyrosine kinases.
  • PLC-ε is activated by Ras.
  • PLC-ζ is thought to play an important role in vertebrate fertilization, although, its mode of activation is currently unclear.
  • PLC-η has been implicated in neuronal functioning.

All members of the family contain X and Y catalytic domains, SH2 (phosphotyrosine binding) domains are only found in the γ form, and only the ε form contains the RA (Ras Associating) domain. The -β, -δ and -γ forms all contain PH domains at their N-termini, however, the -β subfamily is distinguished from the others by the presence of a long C-terminal extension which is required for activation by Gαq subunits.

See also

Additional images

External links