Reference : The Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPases and Their Role as Major New Players in Human Disease.
Scientific journals : Article
Life sciences : Multidisciplinary, general & others
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/31498
The Plasma Membrane Calcium ATPases and Their Role as Major New Players in Human Disease.
English
Stafford, Nicholas [> >]
Wilson, Claire [> >]
Oceandy, Delvac [> >]
Neyses, Ludwig mailto [University of Luxembourg > Rectorate > Research Service]
Cartwright, Elizabeth J. [> >]
2017
Physiological Reviews
97
3
1089-1125
Yes (verified by ORBilu)
0031-9333
1522-1210
United States
[en] The Ca2+ extrusion function of the four mammalian isoforms of the plasma membrane calcium ATPases (PMCAs) is well established. There is also ever-increasing detail known of their roles in global and local Ca2+ homeostasis and intracellular Ca2+ signaling in a wide variety of cell types and tissues. It is becoming clear that the spatiotemporal patterns of expression of the PMCAs and the fact that their abundances and relative expression levels vary from cell type to cell type both reflect and impact on their specific functions in these cells. Over recent years it has become increasingly apparent that these genes have potentially significant roles in human health and disease, with PMCAs1-4 being associated with cardiovascular diseases, deafness, autism, ataxia, adenoma, and malarial resistance. This review will bring together evidence of the variety of tissue-specific functions of PMCAs and will highlight the roles these genes play in regulating normal physiological functions and the considerable impact the genes have on human disease.
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/31498
Copyright (c) 2017 the American Physiological Society.

File(s) associated to this reference

Fulltext file(s):

FileCommentaryVersionSizeAccess
Open access
Stafford et al Phys Rev 2017.pdfPublisher postprint1.28 MBView/Open

Bookmark and Share SFX Query

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.