Extracellular annexin II.
Annexin II belongs to a family of calcium-dependent, phospholipid binding proteins. Annexin II was first identified as an intracellular protein and attributed intracellular functions. Although it lacks a signal peptide and its mechanism of secretion is unknown, extracellular annexin II has recently been found in several tissues as both soluble and membrane-bound protein. Cell-surface annexin II has been identified as a receptor for a number of polypeptide ligands. Extracellular annexin II may be important in several biological processes, such as fibrinolysis, cell adhesion, ligand-mediated cell signaling and virus infection. These processes provide several possibilities for therapeutic approaches targeting extracellular annexin II, and future research should further illuminate the biology of this molecule.
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Related Subject Headings
- Tenascin
- Signal Transduction
- Plasminogen Activators
- Models, Molecular
- Membrane Proteins
- Ligands
- Humans
- Cell Adhesion
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- Annexin A2
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Tenascin
- Signal Transduction
- Plasminogen Activators
- Models, Molecular
- Membrane Proteins
- Ligands
- Humans
- Cell Adhesion
- Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
- Annexin A2