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Biochemical Journal logoLink to Biochemical Journal
. 2003 Dec 15;376(Pt 3):e7–e8. doi: 10.1042/BJ20031675

Attractin' more attention - new pieces in the obesity puzzle?

Giles S H Yeo 1, Kenneth Siddle 1
PMCID: PMC1223828  PMID: 14656215

Abstract

Genetic, biochemical and pharmacological studies in humans and rodents have established that signalling through the G-protein-coupled melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) by pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)-derived ligands plays a critical role in the central suppression of appetite. As a consequence, malfunction of this signalling system leads to the development of obesity. It has been shown previously that melanocortin signalling can be modulated by the type 1 transmembrane protein attractin, apparently acting as a co-receptor for the inhibitory ligand agouti. Work reported in this issue of Biochemical Journal (Haqq et al.) demonstrates that the cytosolic tail of an attractin-like protein (ALP) binds directly and specifically to the C-terminal region of MC4R, raising the possibility that proteins of the attractin family influence melanocortin receptor function through multiple mechanisms.

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