Scavenger Receptors
The scavenger receptor (SR) family is a group of membrane receptors that share the common ability to bind and internalize modified forms of low-density lipoproteins (mLDL), a process which is centrally important for the removal of foreign substances and waste materials. SR-A is a type II, trimeric transmembrane glycoprotein. Class A scavenger receptors (SR-A1 and SR-A2) contain a single transmembrane domain, an α-helical coiled-coil domain, a collagen-like domain, and a C-terminal cysteine-rich domain. Class B scavenger receptors (CR-B1, CD36) contain two transmembrane domains, and Class C receptors are separated based on their extracellular N-terminal domain.
- CD5
- CD5L
- CD6
- CD36/SR-B3
- CD68/SR-D1
- CD163
- CL-K1/COLEC11
- CL-P1/COLEC12
- CXCL16
- LDLR
- LIMPII/SR-B2
- LOX-1/OLR1
- LRP-1
- LRP-1 Cluster II
- LRP-1 Cluster III
- LRP-1 Cluster IV
- LRP-1B
- LRP-10
- LRP-11
- MARCO
- Megalin/LRP2
- MMR/CD206
- Mrc2
- SCARA3
- SCARA5
- SR-AI/MSR
- SR-BI
- SRCRB4D
- SREC-I/SCARF1
- SREC-II/SCARF2
- SSc5D
- Stabilin-1
- Stabilin-2