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1.
Increasing evidence shows that stimulation of beta-adrenergic receptor (AR) activates mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), in addition to the classical G(s)-adenylyl cyclase-cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) signaling cascade. In the present study, we demonstrate a novel beta(2)-AR-mediated cross-talk between PKA and p38 MAPK in adult mouse cardiac myocytes expressing beta(2)-AR, with a null background of beta(1)beta(2)-AR double knockout. beta(2)-AR stimulation by isoproterenol increased p38 MAPK activity in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Inhibiting G(i) with pertussis toxin or scavenging Gbetagamma with betaARK-ct overexpression could not prevent beta(2)-AR-induced p38 MAPK activation. In contrast, a specific peptide inhibitor of PKA, PKI (5 microm), completely abolished the stimulatory effect of beta(2)-AR, suggesting that beta(2)-AR-induced p38 MAPK activation is mediated via a PKA-dependent mechanism, rather than by G(i) or Gbetagamma. This conclusion was further supported by the ability of forskolin (10 microm), an adenylyl cyclase activator, to elevate p38 MAPK activity in a PKI-sensitive manner. Furthermore, inhibition of p38 MAPK with SB203580 (10 microm) markedly enhanced the beta(2)-AR-mediated contractile response, without altering base-line contractility. These results provide the first evidence that cardiac beta(2)-AR activates p38 MAPK via a PKA-dependent signaling pathway, rather than by G(i) or Gbetagamma, and reveal a novel role of p38 MAPK in regulating cardiac contractility.  相似文献   

2.
A plausible determinant of the specificity of receptor signaling is the cellular compartment over which the signal is broadcast. In rat heart, stimulation of beta(1)-adrenergic receptor (beta(1)-AR), coupled to G(s)-protein, or beta(2)-AR, coupled to G(s)- and G(i)-proteins, both increase L-type Ca(2+) current, causing enhanced contractile strength. But only beta(1)-AR stimulation increases the phosphorylation of phospholamban, troponin-I, and C-protein, causing accelerated muscle relaxation and reduced myofilament sensitivity to Ca(2+). beta(2)-AR stimulation does not affect any of these intracellular proteins. We hypothesized that beta(2)-AR signaling might be localized to the cell membrane. Thus we examined the spatial range and characteristics of beta(1)-AR and beta(2)-AR signaling on their common effector, L-type Ca(2+) channels. Using the cell-attached patch-clamp technique, we show that stimulation of beta(1)-AR or beta(2)-AR in the patch membrane, by adding agonist into patch pipette, both activated the channels in the patch. But when the agonist was applied to the membrane outside the patch pipette, only beta(1)-AR stimulation activated the channels. Thus, beta(1)-AR signaling to the channels is diffusive through cytosol, whereas beta(2)-AR signaling is localized to the cell membrane. Furthermore, activation of G(i) is essential to the localization of beta(2)-AR signaling because in pertussis toxin-treated cells, beta(2)-AR signaling becomes diffusive. Our results suggest that the dual coupling of beta(2)-AR to both G(s)- and G(i)-proteins leads to a highly localized beta(2)-AR signaling pathway to modulate sarcolemmal L-type Ca(2+) channels in rat ventricular myocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Phosphorylation of G-protein-coupled receptors by second-messenger-stimulated kinases is central to the process of receptor desensitization [1-3]. Phosphorylation of the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (beta(2)-AR) by protein kinase A (PKA), in addition to uncoupling adenylate cyclase activation, is obligatory for receptor-mediated activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) cascades [4] [5]. Although mechanisms for linking G-protein-coupled receptor kinases to the activated receptor are well established, analogous mechanisms for targeting second messenger kinases to the beta(2)-AR at the plasma membrane have not been elucidated. Here we show that the A-kinase-anchoring protein, AKAP79/150, co-precipitates with the beta(2)-AR in cell and tissue extracts, nucleating a signaling complex that includes PKA, protein kinase C (PKC) and protein phosphatase PP2B. The anchoring protein directly and constitutively interacts with the beta(2)-AR and promotes receptor phosphorylation following agonist stimulation. Functional studies show that PKA anchoring is required to enhance beta(2)-AR phosphorylation and to facilitate downstream activation of the MAP kinase pathway. This defines a role for AKAP79/150 in the recruitment of second-messenger-regulated signaling enzymes to a G-protein-coupled receptor.  相似文献   

4.
G protein-activated inwardly rectifying K(+) (GIRK) channels, expressed in atrial myocytes, various neurons, and endocrine cells, represent the paradigmatic target of beta gamma subunits released from activated heterotrimeric G proteins. These channels contribute to physiological slowing of cardiac frequency and synaptic inhibition. They are activated by beta gamma dimers released upon stimulation of receptors coupled to pertussis toxin-sensitive G proteins (G(i/o)), whereas beta gamma released from G(s) do not converge on the channel subunits. This is in conflict with the finding that dimeric combinations of various beta and gamma subunits can activate GIRK channels with little specificity. In the present study, we have overexpressed the major subtypes of cardiac beta-adrenergic receptors (beta(1)-AR and beta(2)-AR) in atrial myocytes by transient transfection. Whereas in native cells beta-adrenergic stimulation with isoproterenol failed to induce measurable GIRK current, robust currents were recorded from myocytes overexpressing either beta(1)-AR or beta(2)-AR. Whereas the beta(2)-AR-induced current showed the same sensitivity to pertussis toxin as the current evoked by the endogenous G(i/o)-coupled muscarinic M(2) receptor, isoproterenol-activated currents were insensitive to pertussis toxin treatment in beta(1)-AR-overexpressing myocytes. In contrast to a recent publication (Leaney, J. L., Milligan, G., and Tinker, A. (2000) J. Biol. Chem. 275, 921-929), sizable GIRK currents could also be activated by isoproterenol when the signaling pathway was reconstituted by transient transfection in two different standard cell lines (Chinese hamster ovary and HEK293). These results demonstrate that specificity of receptor-G protein signaling can be disrupted by overexpression of receptors. Moreover, the alpha subunit of heterotrimeric G proteins does not confer specificity to G beta gamma-mediated signaling.  相似文献   

5.
Cardiac-specific overexpression of the human beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (AR) in transgenic mice (TG4) enhances basal cardiac function due to ligand-independent spontaneous beta(2)-AR activation. However, agonist-mediated stimulation of either beta(1)-AR or beta(2)-AR fails to further enhance contractility in TG4 ventricular myocytes. Although the lack of beta(2)-AR response has been ascribed to an efficient coupling of the receptor to pertussis toxin-sensitive G(i) proteins in addition to G(s), the contractile response to beta(1)-AR stimulation by norepinephrine and an alpha(1)-adrenergic antagonist prazosin is not restored by pertussis toxin treatment despite a G(i) protein elevation of 1.7-fold in TG4 hearts. Since beta-adrenergic receptor kinase, betaARK1, activity remains unaltered, the unresponsiveness of beta(1)-AR is not caused by betaARK1-mediated receptor desensitization. In contrast, pre-incubation of cells with anti-adrenergic reagents such as muscarinic receptor agonist, carbachol (10(-5)m), or a beta(2)-AR inverse agonist, ICI 118,551 (5 x 10(-7)m), to abolish spontaneous beta(2)-AR signaling, both reduce the base-line cAMP and contractility and, surprisingly, restore the beta(1)-AR contractile response. The "rescued" contractile response is completely reversed by a beta(1)-AR antagonist, CGP 20712A. Furthermore, these results from the transgenic animals are corroborated by in vitro acute gene manipulation in cultured wild type adult mouse ventricular myocytes. Adenovirus-directed overexpression of the human beta(2)-AR results in elevated base-line cAMP and contraction associated with a marked attenuation of beta(1)-AR response; carbachol pretreatment fully revives the diminished beta(1)-AR contractile response. Thus, we conclude that constitutive beta(2)-AR activation induces a heterologous desensitization of beta(1)-ARs independent of betaARK1 and G(i) proteins; suppression of the constitutive beta(2)-AR signaling by either a beta(2)-AR inverse agonist or stimulation of the muscarinic receptor rescues the beta(1)-ARs from desensitization, permitting agonist-induced contractile response.  相似文献   

6.
The NADPH oxidase (NOX) family of enzymes oxidase catalyzes the transport of electrons from NADPH to molecular oxygen and generates O(2)(?-), which is rapidly converted into H(2)O(2). We aimed to identify in hepatocytes the protein NOX complex responsible for H(2)O(2) synthesis after α(1)-adrenoceptor (α(1)-AR) stimulation, its activation mechanism, and to explore H(2)O(2) as a potential modulator of hepatic metabolic routes, gluconeogenesis, and ureagenesis, stimulated by the ARs. The dormant NOX2 complex present in hepatocyte plasma membrane (HPM) contains gp91(phox), p22(phox), p40(phox), p47(phox), p67(phox) and Rac 1 proteins. In HPM incubated with NADPH and guanosine triphosphate (GTP), α(1)-AR-mediated H(2)O(2) synthesis required all of these proteins except for p40(phox). A functional link between α(1)-AR and NOX was identified as the Gα(13) protein. Alpha(1)-AR stimulation in hepatocytes promotes Rac1-GTP generation, a necessary step for H(2)O(2) synthesis. Negative cross talk between α(1)-/β-ARs for H(2)O(2) synthesis was observed in HPM. In addition, negative cross talk of α(1)-AR via H(2)O(2) to β-AR-mediated stimulation was recorded in hepatocyte gluconeogenesis and ureagenesis, probably involving aquaporine activity. Based on previous work we suggest that H(2)O(2), generated after NOX2 activation by α(1)-AR lightening in hepatocytes, reacts with cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) subunits to form an oxidized PKA, insensitive to cAMP activation that prevented any rise in the rate of gluconeogenesis and ureagenesis.  相似文献   

7.
In atrial myocytes, an initial exposure to isoproterenol (ISO) acts via cAMP to mediate a subsequent acetylcholine (ACh)-induced activation of ATP-sensitive K(+) current (I(K,ATP)). In addition, beta-adrenergic receptor (beta-AR) stimulation activates nitric oxide (NO) release. The present study determined whether the conditioning effect of beta-AR stimulation acts via beta(1)- and/or beta(2)-ARs and whether it is mediated via NO signaling. 0.1 microM ISO plus ICI 118,551 (ISO-beta(1)-AR stimulation) or ISO plus atenolol (ISO-beta(2)-AR stimulation) both increased L-type Ca(2+) current (I(Ca,L)) markedly, but only ISO-beta(2)-AR stimulation mediated ACh-induced activation of I(K,ATP). 1 microM zinterol (beta(2)-AR agonist) also increased I(Ca,L) and mediated ACh-activated I(K,ATP). Inhibition of NO synthase (10 microM L-NIO), guanylate cyclase (10 microM ODQ), or cAMP-PKA (50 microM Rp-cAMPs) attenuated zinterol-induced stimulation of I(Ca,L) and abolished ACh-activated I(K,ATP). Spermine-NO (100 microM; an NO donor) mimicked beta(2)-AR stimulation, and its effects were abolished by Rp-cAMPs. Intracellular dialysis of 20 microM protein kinase inhibitory peptide (PKI) abolished zinterol-induced stimulation of I(Ca,L). Measurements of intracellular NO ([NO](i)) using the fluorescent indicator DAF-2 showed that ISO-beta(2)-AR stimulation or zinterol increased [NO](i). L-NIO (10 microM) blocked ISO- and zinterol-induced increases in [NO](i). ISO-beta(1)-AR stimulation failed to increase [NO](i). Inhibition of G(i)-protein by pertussis toxin significantly inhibited zinterol-mediated increases in [NO](i). Wortmannin (0.2 microM) or LY294002 (10 microM), inhibitors of phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase (PI-3K), abolished the effects of zinterol to both mediate ACh-activated I(K,ATP) and stimulate [NO](i). We conclude that both beta(1)- and beta(2)-ARs stimulate cAMP. beta(2)-ARs act via two signaling pathways to stimulate cAMP, one of which is mediated via G(i)-protein and PI-3K coupled to NO-cGMP signaling. Only beta(2)-ARs acting exclusively via NO signaling mediate ACh-induced activation of I(K,ATP). NO signaling also contributes to beta(2)-AR stimulation of I(Ca,L). The differential effects of beta(1)- and beta(2)-ARs can be explained by the coupling of these two beta-ARs to different effector signaling pathways.  相似文献   

8.
Liu F  He K  Yang X  Xu N  Liang Z  Xu M  Zhao X  Han Q  Zhang Y 《PloS one》2011,6(6):e21520
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) activate mitogen-activated protein kinases through a number of distinct pathways in cells. Increasing evidence has suggested that endosomal signaling has an important role in receptor signal transduction. Here we investigated the involvement of endocytosis in α(1A)-adrenergic receptor (α(1A)-AR)-induced activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2). Agonist-mediated endocytic traffic of α(1A)-AR was assessed by real-time imaging of living, stably transfected human embryonic kidney 293A cells (HEK-293A). α(1A)-AR was internalized dynamically in cells with agonist stimulation, and actin filaments regulated the initial trafficking of α(1A)-AR. α(1A)-AR-induced activation of ERK1/2 but not p38 MAPK was sensitive to disruption of endocytosis, as demonstrated by 4°C chilling, dynamin mutation and treatment with cytochalasin D (actin depolymerizing agent). Activation of protein kinase C (PKC) and C-Raf by α(1A)-AR was not affected by 4°C chilling or cytochalasin D treatment. U73122 (a phospholipase C [PLC] inhibitor) and Ro 31-8220 (a PKC inhibitor) inhibited α(1B)-AR- but not α(1A)-AR-induced ERK1/2 activation. These data suggest that the endocytic pathway is involved in α(1A)-AR-induced ERK1/2 activation, which is independent of G(q)/PLC/PKC signaling.  相似文献   

9.
Selective stimulation of beta(2)-adrenergic receptors (ARs) in newborn rabbit ventricular myocardium invokes a positive inotropic effect that is lost during postnatal maturation. The underlying mechanisms for this age-related stimulatory response remain unresolved. We examined the effects of beta(2)-AR stimulation on L-type Ca(2+) current (I(Ca,L)) during postnatal development. I(Ca,L) was measured (37 degrees C; either Ca(2+) or Ba(2+) as the charge carrier) using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique in newborn (1 to 5 days old) and adult rabbit ventricular myocytes. Ca(2+) transients were measured concomitantly by dialyzing the cell with indo-1. Activation of beta(2)-ARs (with either 100 nM zinterol or 1 microM isoproterenol in the presence of the beta(1)-AR antagonist, CGP20712A) stimulated I(Ca,L) twofold in newborns but not in adults. The beta(2)-AR-mediated increase in Ca(2+) transient amplitude in newborns was due exclusively to the augmentation of I(Ca,L). Zinterol increased the rate of inactivation of I(Ca,L) and increased the Ca(2+) flux integral. The beta(2)-AR inverse agonist, ICI-118551 (500 nM), but not the beta(1)-AR antagonist, CGP20712A (500 nM), blocked the response to zinterol. Unexpectedly, the PKA blockers, H-89 (10 microM), PKI 6-22 amide (10 microM), and Rp-cAMP (100 microM), all failed to prevent the response to zinterol but completely blocked responses to selective beta(1)-AR stimulation of I(Ca,L) in newborns. Our results demonstrate that in addition to the conventional beta(1)-AR/cAMP/PKA pathway, newborn rabbit myocardium exhibits a novel beta(2)-AR-mediated, PKA-insensitive pathway that stimulates I(Ca,L). This striking developmental difference plays a major role in the age-related differences in inotropic responses to beta(2)-AR agonists.  相似文献   

10.
PDE4B and PDE4D provide >90% of PDE4 cAMP phosphodiesterase activity in human embryonic kidney (HEK293B2) cells. Their selective small interference RNA (siRNA)-mediated knockdown potentiates isoprenaline-stimulated protein kinase A (PKA) activation. Whereas endogenous PDE4D co-immunoprecipitates with beta arrestin, endogenous PDE4B does not, even upon PDE4D knockdown. Ectopic overexpression of PDE4B2 confers co-immunoprecipitation with beta arrestin. Knockdown of PDE4D, but not PDE4B, amplifies isoprenaline-stimulated phosphorylation of the beta2-adrenergic receptor (beta2-AR) by PKA and activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) through G(i). Isoform-selective knockdown identifies PDE4D5 as the functionally important species regulating isoprenaline stimulation of both these processes. Ht31-mediated disruption of the tethering of PKA to AKAP scaffold proteins attenuates isoprenaline activation of ERK, even upon PDE4D knockdown. Selective siRNA-mediated knockdown identifies AKAP79, which is constitutively associated with the beta2-AR, rather than isoprenaline-recruited gravin, as being the functionally relevant AKAP in this process. Isoprenaline-stimulated membrane recruitment of PDE4D is ablated upon beta arrestin knockdown. A mutation that compromises interactions with beta arrestin prevents catalytically inactive PDE4D5 from performing a dominant negative role in potentiating isoprenaline-stimulated ERK activation. Beta arrestin-recruited PDE4D5 desensitizes isoprenaline-stimulated PKA phosphorylation of the beta2-AR and the consequential switching of its signaling to ERK. The ability to observe a cellular phenotype upon PDE4D5 knockdown demonstrates that other PDE4 isoforms, expressed at endogenous levels, are unable to afford rescue in HEK293B2 cells.  相似文献   

11.
Understanding the mechanisms that regulate cell migration is important for devising novel therapies to control metastasis or enhance wound healing. Previously, we demonstrated that beta2-adrenergic receptor (beta2-AR) activation in keratinocytes inhibited their migration by decreasing the phosphorylation of a critical promigratory signaling component, the extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK). Here we demonstrate that beta2-AR-induced inhibition of migration is mediated by the activation of the serine/threonine phosphatase PP2A. Pretreating human keratinocytes with the PP2A inhibitor, okadaic acid, prevented the beta2-AR-induced inhibition of migration, either as isolated cells or as a confluent sheet of cells repairing an in vitro "wound" and also prevented the beta2-AR-induced reduction in ERK phosphorylation. Similar results were obtained with human corneal epithelial cells. In keratinocytes, immunoprecipitation studies revealed that beta2-AR activation resulted in the rapid association of beta2-AR with PP2A as well as a 37% increase in association of PP2A with ERK2. Finally, beta2-AR activation resulted in a rapid and transient 2-fold increase in PP2A activity. Thus, we provide the first evidence that beta2-AR activation in keratinocytes modulates migration via a novel pathway utilizing PP2A to alter the promigratory signaling cascade. Exploiting this pathway may result in novel therapeutic approaches for control of epithelial cell migration.  相似文献   

12.
Turner NA  O'regan DJ  Ball SG  Porter KE 《FEBS letters》2004,576(1-2):156-160
We previously demonstrated that chronic stimulation of the beta2-adrenergic receptor (beta2-AR) increases proliferation of cultured human cardiac fibroblasts (CF) via an autocrine mechanism. Here, we investigated the role of endothelin-1 (ET-1) in this process. ETA-receptor antagonism or protein kinase C inhibition abolished the beta2-AR-induced increase in cell proliferation. RT-PCR and ELISA analysis demonstrated that although CF synthesized and secreted ET-1, this occurred independently of beta2-AR stimulation. Furthermore, despite activation of the MAP kinase pathway, ET-1 treatment did not stimulate CF proliferation. Therefore, the role of ET-1 in this process is that of an essential co-factor acting independently of beta2-AR stimulation.  相似文献   

13.
Although it has generally been assumed that protein kinase A (PKA) is essential for brown adipose tissue function, this has not as yet been clearly demonstrated. H89, an inhibitor of PKA, was used here to inhibit PKA activity. In cell extracts, it was confirmed that norepinephrine stimulated PKA activity, which was abolished by H89 treatment. In isolated brown adipocytes, H89 inhibited adrenergically induced thermogenesis (with an IC(50) of approx. 40 microM), and in cultured cells, adrenergically stimulated expression of the uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1) gene was abolished by H89 (full inhibition with 50 microM). However, H89 has been reported to be an adrenergic antagonist on beta(1)/beta(2)-adrenoceptors (AR). Although adrenergic stimulation of thermogenesis and UCP1 gene expression are mediated via beta(3)-ARs, it was deemed necessary to investigate whether H89 also had antagonistic potency on beta(3)-ARs. It was found that EC(50) values for beta(3)-AR-selective stimulation of cAMP production (with BRL-37344) in brown adipose tissue membrane fractions and in intact cells were not affected by H89. Similarly, the EC(50) of adrenergically stimulated oxygen consumption was not affected by H89. As H89 also abolished forskolin-induced UCP1 gene expression, and potentiated selective beta(3)-AR-induced cAMP production, H89 must be active downstream of cAMP. Thus, no antagonism of H89 on beta(3)-ARs could be detected. We conclude that H89 can be used as a pharmacological tool for elucidation of the involvement of PKA in cellular signalling processes regulated via beta(3)-ARs, and that the results are concordant with adrenergic stimulation of thermogenesis and UCP1 gene expression in brown adipocytes being mediated via a PKA-dependent pathway.  相似文献   

14.
While classically viewed as a prototypic G(s) and adenylyl cyclase-coupled G protein-coupled receptor, recent studies have indicated that some aspects of beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (beta(2)-AR) signaling are inhibited by pertussis toxin, indicating that they are mediated by G(i)/G(o) proteins. These signals include activation of ERK MAPKs and Akt activation, as well as hypertrophic and anti-apoptotic pathways in cardiac myocytes. Studies in cultured cells have suggested the hypothesis that protein kinase A (PKA)-mediated phosphorylation of the beta(2)-AR regulates its coupling specificity with respect to G(s) and G(i). Using a Chinese hamster ovary cell system, we show that mutant beta(2)-ARs with Ala substituted for Ser at consensus PKA sites stimulate robust cyclic AMP accumulation (G(s)) but are unable to activate ERK (G(i)). In contrast, Ser --> Asp mutants are dramatically impaired in their ability to activate adenylyl cyclase but are significantly more active than wild type receptor in activating ERK. Activation of adenylyl cyclase by wild type and Ser --> Ala mutant receptors is not altered by pertussis toxin, whereas adenylyl cyclase stimulated through the Ser --> Asp mutant is enhanced. Activation of ERK by wild type and Ser --> Asp receptors is inhibited by pertussis toxin. To further rigorously test the hypothesis, we utilized a completely reconstituted system of purified recombinant wild type and PKA phosphorylation site mutant beta(2)-ARs and heterotrimeric G(s) and G(i). G protein coupling was measured by receptor-mediated stimulation of GTPgammaS binding to the G protein. PKA-mediated phosphorylation of the beta(2)-AR significantly decreased its ability to couple to G(s), while simultaneously dramatically increasing its ability to couple to G(i). These results are reproduced when a purified recombinant Ser --> Asp mutant beta(2)-AR is tested, whereas the Ser --> Ala receptor resembles the unphosphorylated wild type. These results provide strong experimental support for the idea that PKA-mediated phosphorylation of the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor switches its predominant coupling from G(s) to G(i).  相似文献   

15.
Gong K  Li Z  Xu M  Du J  Lv Z  Zhang Y 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2008,283(43):29028-29036
A growing body of evidence has demonstrated that p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) has a crucial role in various physiological and pathological processes mediated by beta(2)-adrenergic receptors (beta(2)-ARs). However, the detailed mechanism of beta(2)-ARs-induced p38 MAPK activation has not yet been fully defined. The present study demonstrates a novel kinetic model of p38 MAPK activation induced by beta(2)-ARs in human embryonic kidney 293A cells. The beta(2)-AR agonist isoproterenol induced a time-dependent biphasic phosphorylation of p38 MAPK: the early phase peaked at 10 min, and was followed by a delayed phase that appeared at 90 min and was sustained for 6 h. Interestingly, inhibition of the cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) pathway failed to affect the early phosphorylation but abolished the delayed activation. By contrast, silencing of beta-arrestin-1 expression by small interfering RNA inhibited the early phase activation of p38 MAPK. Furthermore, the NADPH oxidase complex is a downstream target of beta-arrestin-1, as evidenced by the fact that isoproterenol-induced Rac1 activation was also suppressed by beta-arrestin-1 knockdown. In addition, early phase activation of p38 MAPK was prevented by inactivation of Rac1 and NADPH oxidase by pharmacological inhibitors, overexpression of a dominant negative mutant of Rac1, and p47(phox) knockdown by RNA interference. Of note, we demonstrated that only early activation of p38 MAPK is involved in isoproterenol-induced F-actin rearrangement. Collectively, these data suggest that the classic cAMP/PKA pathway is responsible for the delayed activation, whereas a beta-arrestin-1/Rac1/NADPH oxidase-dependent signaling is a heretofore unrecognized mechanism for beta(2)-AR-mediated early activation of p38 MAPK.  相似文献   

16.
Chimeric G proteins made by replacing the COOH-terminal heptapeptide of G(alpha)q with the COOH-terminal heptapeptide of G(alpha)s or G(alpha)i were used to assess the relative coupling of beta(3)-adrenergic receptor (beta(3)-AR) splice variants (beta(3A) and beta(3B)) to G(alpha)s and G(alpha)i. The G(alpha)q/s and G(alpha)q/i chimeras transformed the response to receptor activation from regulation of adenylyl cyclase to mobilization of intracellular calcium (Ca(2+)(i)). Complementary high-throughput and single-cell approaches were used to evaluate agonist-induced coupling of the receptor to the G protein chimeras. In cells stably transformed with rat beta(3)-AR, transfected with the G protein chimeras, and evaluated using a scanning fluorometer, beta(3)-AR-induced coupling to G(alpha)q/s produced a rapid eightfold increase in Ca(2+)(i) followed by a slow decay to levels 25% above baseline. G(alpha)q/i also linked rat beta(3)-AR to mobilization of Ca(2+)(i) in a similar time- and agonist-dependent manner, but the net 2.5-fold increase in Ca(2+)(i) was only 30% of the response obtained with G(alpha)q/s. Activation of the rat beta(3)-AR also increased GTP binding to endogenous G(alpha)i threefold in membranes from CHO cells stably transformed with the receptor. A complementary single-cell imaging approach was used to assess the relative coupling of mouse beta(3A)- and beta(3B)-AR to G(alpha)i under conditions established to produce equivalent agonist-dependent coupling of the receptor splice variants to G(alpha)q/s and to increases in intracellular cAMP through endogenous G(alpha)s. The beta(3A)- and beta(3B)-AR coupled equivalently to G(alpha)q/i, but the temporal patterns of Ca(2+)(i) mobilization indicated that coupling was significantly less efficient than coupling to G(alpha)q/s. Collectively, these findings indicate less efficient but equivalent coupling of beta(3A)- and beta(3B)-AR to G(alpha)i vs. G(alpha)s and suggest that differential expression of the splice variants would not produce local differences in signaling networks linked to beta(3)-AR activation.  相似文献   

17.
A fundamental question in biology is how the various motifs in G protein-coupled receptors participate in the divergent functions orchestrated by these molecules. Here we describe a fundamental role for a serine residue at position 312 in the third intracellular loop of the human beta(1)-adrenergic receptor (beta(1)-AR) in endocytic recycling of the agonist-internalized receptor. In receptor recycling experiments that were monitored by confocal microscopy, the agonist-internalized wild-type (WT) beta(1)-AR recycled with a t(0.5) of 14 +/- 3 min. Mutagenesis of Ser(312) to alanine (Ser(312) --> Ala beta(1)-AR) or to the phosphoserine mimic aspartic acid (Ser(312) --> Asp beta(1)-AR) resulted in beta(1)-AR constructs that were pharmacologically indistinguishable from the WT beta(1)-AR. The internalized Ser(312) --> Asp beta(1)-AR recycled efficiently with a t(0.5) of 11 +/- 3 min, whereas the internalized Ser(312) --> Ala beta(1)-AR was not recycled or functionally resensitized through the endosomal pathway. Because this serine is a putative residue for phosphorylation by the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA), we examined the role of this kinase in recycling of the internalized beta(1)-AR. Inhibition of PKA biochemically or genetically using a dominant negative PKA construct blocked the recycling of the internalized WT beta(1)-AR. Phosphorylation studies revealed that the beta(1)-AR is partially phosphorylated by PKA and that phosphorylation of the beta(1)-AR by the catalytic subunit of PKA occurs exclusively at Ser(312). Our results identify a new signaling paradigm in which homologous activation of a kinase provides a reversible modification that shifts the itinerary of the internalized receptor toward recycling and resensitization. Therefore, PKA-mediated phosphorylation of G protein-coupled receptors might result in motif-dependent desensitization or resensitization.  相似文献   

18.
Differential modes for beta(1)- and beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (AR) regulation of adenylyl cyclase in cardiomyocytes is most consistent with spatial regulation in microdomains of the plasma membrane. This study examines whether caveolae represent specialized subdomains that concentrate and organize these moieties in cardiomyocytes. Caveolae from quiescent rat ventricular cardiomyocytes are highly enriched in beta(2)-ARs, Galpha(i), protein kinase A RIIalpha subunits, caveolin-3, and flotillins (caveolin functional homologues); beta(1)-ARs, m(2)-muscarinic cholinergic receptors, Galpha(s), and cardiac types V/VI adenylyl cyclase distribute between caveolae and other cell fractions, whereas protein kinase A RIalpha subunits, G protein-coupled receptor kinase-2, and clathrin are largely excluded from caveolae. Cell surface beta(2)-ARs localize to caveolae in cardiomyocytes and cardiac fibroblasts (with markedly different beta(2)-AR expression levels), indicating that the fidelity of beta(2)-AR targeting to caveolae is maintained over a physiologic range of beta(2)-AR expression. In cardiomyocytes, agonist stimulation leads to a marked decline in the abundance of beta(2)-ARs (but not beta(1)-ARs) in caveolae. Other studies show co-immunoprecipitation of cardiomyocytes adenylyl cyclase V/VI and caveolin-3, suggesting their in vivo association. However, caveolin is not required for adenylyl cyclase targeting to low density membranes, since adenylyl cyclase targets to low buoyant density membrane fractions of HEK cells that lack prototypical caveolins. Nevertheless, cholesterol depletion with cyclodextrin augments agonist-stimulated cAMP accumulation, indicating that caveolae function as negative regulators of cAMP accumulation. The inhibitory interaction between caveolae and the cAMP signaling pathway as well as domain-specific differences in the stoichiometry of individual elements in the beta-AR signaling cascade represent important modifiers of cAMP-dependent signaling in the heart.  相似文献   

19.
Differences in energy metabolism during beta(1)- and beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (AR) stimulation have been shown to translate to differences in the elicited functional responses. It has been suggested that differential access to glycogen during beta(1)- compared with beta(2)-AR stimulation may influence the peak functional response and modulation of the response during sustained adrenergic stimulation. Interleaved (13)C- and (31)P-NMR spectroscopy was used during beta(1)- and beta(2)-AR stimulation at matched peak workload (2.5 times baseline) in the isolated perfused rat heart to monitor glycogen levels, phosphorylation potential, and intracellular pH. Simultaneous measurements of left ventricular (LV) function [LV developed pressure (LVDP)], heart rate (HR), and rate-pressure product (RPP = LVDP x HR) were also performed. The heart was perfused under both substrate-free (SF) conditions and with exogenous glucose (G). The greater glycogenolysis was observed during beta(1)- than beta(2)-AR stimulation with G (54% vs. 38% reduction, P = 0.006) and SF (92% vs. 79% reduction, P = 0.04) perfusions. The greater beta(1)-AR-mediated glycogenolysis was correlated with greater ability to sustain the initial contractile response. However, with SF perfusion, the duration of this ability was limited: excessive early glycogen depletion caused an earlier decline in LVDP and phosphorylation potential during beta(1)- than beta(2)-AR stimulation. Therefore, endogenous glycogen stores are depleted earlier and to a greater extent, despite a slightly weaker overall inotropic response, during beta(1)- than beta(2)-AR stimulation. These findings are consistent with beta(1)-AR-specific PKA-dependent glycogen phosphorylase kinase signaling.  相似文献   

20.
Oxidation of membrane cholesterol is a hallmark of many pathological conditions, including cardiovascular diseases. Cholesterol could be oxidized in a result of free radical and enzymatic reactions. Here, we studied the effect of cholesterol oxidation by cholesterol oxidase (ChO) on responses to β-AR stimulation in isolated mouse atria. Acute exposure to ChO led to partial cholesterol oxidation without a significant change in atrial membrane cholesterol content. Pretreatment with ChO itself did not affect contractions and Ca2+ transient amplitude. However, cholesterol oxidation markedly suppressed β-AR-mediated increase in contractility and Ca2+ transient as well as NO levels. At the same time, ChO markedly facilitated β-AR-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Antioxidant and protein kinase C inhibitor prevented the depressant action of ChO on ISO-dependent contractility, Ca2+ transient and NO production. Similar effects had a selective β2-AR antagonist, which also suppressed the increase in ROS levels after ChO pretreatment. These results suggest that membrane cholesterol oxidation enhances β2-AR-dependent elevation of ROS production, leading to suppression of β-AR-mediated increase in contractility, Ca2+ transient and NO synthesis in mice atria. The oxidative cholesterol modification could contribute to disturbance in β-AR signaling in pathological conditions.  相似文献   

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