Activin type 1 receptors
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The Activin type I receptors[1] transduce signals for a variety of members of the Transforming growth factor beta superfamily of ligands. This family of cytokines and hormones include activin, anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), and Nodal. They are involved in a host of physiological processes including, growth, cell differentiation, homeostasis, osteogenesis, apoptosis and many other functions. There are three type I Activin receptors: ACVR1, ACVR1B, and ACVR1C. Each bind to a specific type II receptor-ligand complex.
Despite the large amount of processes that these ligands regulate, they all operate through essentially the same pathway: A ligand binds to a Type two receptor, which recruits and trans-phosphorylate a type I receptor. The type I receptor recruits a receptor regulated SMAD (R-SMAD) which it phosphorylates. The RSMAD then translocates to the nucleus where it functions as a transcription factor.
References
[edit]- ^ Olsen, Oddrun Elise; Sankar, Meenu; Elsaadi, Samah; Hella, Hanne; Buene, Glenn; Darvekar, Sagar Ramesh; Misund, Kristine; Katagiri, Takenobu; Knaus, Petra; Holien, Toril (11 June 2018). "BMPR2 inhibits activin and BMP signaling via wild-type ALK2". journals.biologists.com. Journal of Cell Science. pp. jcs213512. doi:10.1242/jcs.213512. Retrieved 21 May 2025.