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1.
The biological activity of luteinizing hormone (LH) receptors can be affected by modifications to the receptor's amino acid sequence or by binding of hormone antagonists such as deglycosylated hCG. Here we have compared rotational diffusion of LH receptors capable of activating adenylate cyclase with that of non-functional hormone-occupied receptors at 4 degrees C and 37 degrees C using time-resolved phosphorescence anisotropy techniques. Binding of hCG to the rat wild-type receptor expressed on 293 cells (LHR-wt cells) or to the LH receptor on MA-10 cells produces functional receptors which exhibit rotational correlation times longer than 1000 micros. However, modification of the LH receptor by substitution of Lys583-->Arg (LHR-K583R) results in a receptor that is non-functional and which has a significantly shorter rotational correlation time of 130+/-12 micros following binding of hCG. When these receptors are treated with deglycosylated hCG, an inactive form of hCG, the rotational correlation times for the LH receptors on LHR-wt and MA-10 cells are also shorter, namely 64+/-8 and 76+/-14 micros, respectively. Finally, a biologically active truncated form of the rat LH receptor expressed in 293 cells (LHR-t631) has slow rotational diffusion, greater than 1000 micros, when occupied by hCG and a significantly shorter rotational correlation time of 103+/-12 micros when occupied by deglycosylated hCG. The effects of rat LH binding to LH receptors on these various cell lines were similar to those of hCG although the magnitude of the changes in receptor rotational diffusion were less pronounced. We suggest that functional LH receptors are present in membrane complexes that exhibit slow rotational diffusion or are rotationally immobile. Shorter rotational correlation times for non-functional hormone-receptor complexes may reflect the absence of essential interactions between these complexes and other membrane proteins.  相似文献   

2.
The ability of cells to interact with each other and their surroundings in a co-ordinated manner depends on multiple adhesive interactions between neighbouring cells and their extracellular environment. These adhesive interactions are mediated by a family of cell surface proteins, termed cell adhesion molecules. Fortunately these adhesion molecules fall into distinct families with adhesive interactions varying in strength from strong binding involved in the maintenance of tissue architecture to more transient, less avid, dynamic interactions observed in leukocyte biology. Adhesion molecules are extremely versatile cell surface receptors which not only stick cells together but provide biochemical and physical signals that regulate a range of diverse functions, such as cell proliferation, gene expression, differentiation, apoptosis and migration. In addition, like many other cell surface molecules, they have been usurped as portals of entry for pathogens, including prions. How the mechanical and chemical messages generated from adhesion molecules are integrated with other signalling pathways (such as receptor tyrosine kinases and phosphatases) and the role that aberrant cell adhesion plays in developmental defects and disease pathology are currently very active areas of research. This review focuses on the biochemical features that define whether a cell surface molecule can act as an adhesion molecule, and discusses five specific examples of how cell adhesion molecules function as more than just 'sticky' receptors. The discussion is confined to the signalling events mediated by members of the integrin, cadherin and immunoglobulin gene superfamilies. It is suggested that, by controlling the membrane organization of signalling receptors, by imposing spatial organization, and by regulating the local concentration of cytosolic adapter proteins, intercellular and cell-matrix adhesion is more than just glue holding cells together. Rather dynamic 'conversations' and the formation of multi-protein complexes between adhesion molecules, growth factor receptors and matrix macromolecules can now provide a molecular explanation for the long-observed but poorly understood requirement for a number of seemingly distinct cell surface molecules to be engaged for efficient cell function to occur.  相似文献   

3.
The ability of cells to interact with each other and their surroundings in a co-ordinated manner depends on multiple adhesive interactions between neighbouring cells and their extracellular environment. These adhesive interactions are mediated by a family of cell surface proteins, termed cell adhesion molecules. Fortunately these adhesion molecules fall into distinct families with adhesive interactions varying in strength from strong binding involved in the maintenance of tissue architecture to more transient, less avid, dynamic interactions observed in leukocyte biology. Adhesion molecules are extremely versatile cell surface receptors which not only stick cells together but provide biochemical and physical signals that regulate a range of diverse functions, such as cell proliferation, gene expression, differentiation, apoptosis and migration. In addition, like many other cell surface molecules, they have been usurped as portals of entry for pathogens, including prions. How the mechanical and chemical messages generated from adhesion molecules are integrated with other signalling pathways (such as receptor tyrosine kinases and phosphatases) and the role that aberrant cell adhesion plays in developmental defects and disease pathology are currently very active areas of research. This review focuses on the biochemical features that define whether a cell surface molecule can act as an adhesion molecule, and discusses five specific examples of how cell adhesion molecules function as more than just 'sticky’ receptors. The discussion is confined to the signalling events mediated by members of the integrin, cadherin and immunoglobulin gene superfamilies. It is suggested that, by controlling the membrane organization of signalling receptors, by imposing spatial organization, and by regulating the local concentration of cytosolic adapter proteins, intercellular and cell-matrix adhesion is more than just glue holding cells together. Rather dynamic ‘conversations’ and the formation of multi-protein complexes between adhesion molecules, growth factor receptors and matrix macromolecules can now provide a molecular explanation for the long-observed but poorly understood requirement for a number of seemingly distinct cell surface molecules to be engaged for efficient cell function to occur.  相似文献   

4.
Eph receptor-ephrin signals are important for controlling repulsive and attractive cell movements during tissue patterning in embryonic development. However, the dynamic cellular responses to these signals at cell-cell contact sites are poorly understood. To examine these events we have used cell microinjection to express EphB4 and ephrinB2 in adjacent Swiss 3T3 fibroblasts and have studied the interaction of the injected cells using time-lapse microscopy. We show that Eph receptors are locally activated wherever neighbouring cells make contact. This triggers dynamic, Rac-regulated membrane ruffles at the Eph-ephrin contact sites. Subsequently, the receptor and ligand cells retract from one another, concomitantly with the endocytosis of the activated Eph receptors and their bound, full-length ephrinB ligands. Both the internalization of the receptor-ligand complexes and the subsequent cell retraction events are dependent on actin polymerization, which in turn is dependent on Rac signalling within the receptor-expressing cells. Similar events occur in primary human endothelial cells. Our findings suggest a novel mechanism for cell repulsion, in which the contact between Eph-expressing and ephrin-expressing cells is destabilized by the localized phagocytosis of the ligand-expressing cell plasma membrane by the receptor-expressing cell.  相似文献   

5.
Tracking cell surface GABAB receptors using an alpha-bungarotoxin tag   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
GABA(B) receptors mediate slow synaptic inhibition in the central nervous system and are important for synaptic plasticity as well as being implicated in disease. Located at pre- and postsynaptic sites, GABA(B) receptors will influence cell excitability, but their effectiveness in doing so will be dependent, in part, on their trafficking to, and stability on, the cell surface membrane. To examine the dynamic behavior of GABA(B) receptors in GIRK cells and neurons, we have devised a method that is based on tagging the receptor with the binding site components for the neurotoxin, alpha-bungarotoxin. By using the alpha-bungarotoxin binding site-tagged GABA(B) R1a subunit (R1a(BBS)), co-expressed with the R2 subunit, we can track receptor mobility using the small reporter, alpha-bungarotoxin-conjugated rhodamine. In this way, the rates of internalization and membrane insertion for these receptors could be measured with fixed and live cells. The results indicate that GABA(B) receptors rapidly turnover in the cell membrane, with the rate of internalization affected by the state of receptor activation. The bungarotoxin-based method of receptor-tagging seems ideally suited to follow the dynamic regulation of other G-protein-coupled receptors.  相似文献   

6.
The plasma membrane in eukaryotic cells contains microdomains that are enriched in certain glycosphingolipids, gangliosides, and sterols (such as cholesterol) to form membrane/lipid rafts (MLR). These regions exist as caveolae, morphologically observable flask-like invaginations, or as a less easily detectable planar form. MLR are scaffolds for many molecular entities, including signaling receptors and ion channels that communicate extracellular stimuli to the intracellular milieu. Much evidence indicates that this organization and/or the clustering of MLR into more active signaling platforms depends upon interactions with and dynamic rearrangement of the cytoskeleton. Several cytoskeletal components and binding partners, as well as enzymes that regulate the cytoskeleton, localize to MLR and help regulate lateral diffusion of membrane proteins and lipids in response to extracellular events (e.g., receptor activation, shear stress, electrical conductance, and nutrient demand). MLR regulate cellular polarity, adherence to the extracellular matrix, signaling events (including ones that affect growth and migration), and are sites of cellular entry of certain pathogens, toxins and nanoparticles. The dynamic interaction between MLR and the underlying cytoskeleton thus regulates many facets of the function of eukaryotic cells and their adaptation to changing environments. Here, we review general features of MLR and caveolae and their role in several aspects of cellular function, including polarity of endothelial and epithelial cells, cell migration, mechanotransduction, lymphocyte activation, neuronal growth and signaling, and a variety of disease settings. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Reciprocal influences between cell cytoskeleton and membrane channels, receptors and transporters. Guest Editor: Jean Claude Hervé.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The possibility that LH receptors exist as isolated molecules when unbound and aggregate upon binding gonadotropins has previously been untestable in viable cells for want of a suitable nonhormone probe. We have now expressed in CHO cells an intrinsically-fluorescent LH receptor involving enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP) fused to the C-terminus of the rat LH receptor (rLHR-GFP). More than half of these receptors (54 +/- 4%) are located on the plasma membrane and are functional: cAMP levels increase 3-5 fold in response to 10 nM LH or hCG. In fluorescence photobleaching recovery studies at 37 degrees C, 54 +/- 13% of unoccupied rLHR-GFP were laterally mobile with a diffusion coefficient D of 16 +/- 3.5 x 10(-10)cm2sec-1. Introduction of 10 nM LH for 1 h slowed receptor lateral diffusion to 6.6 +/- 1.3 x 10(-10)cm2sec-1 and reduced fluorescence recovery after photobleaching to 27 +/- 1%. Following treatment with 1 nM hCG, rLHR-GFP were laterally immobile and were distributed into small fluorescent patches over the cell surface. Thus, unoccupied rLHR-GFP receptors apparently exist as dispersed plasma membrane proteins with comparatively fast lateral diffusion. Interaction of receptors with LH or hCG caused clustering of rLHR-GFP receptors, significantly restricting lateral diffusion.  相似文献   

9.
Luteinizing hormone (LH) and human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) receptors are coupled to intracellular effector systems, most notably adenylate cyclase, through guanyl nucleotide-binding proteins or G-proteins. The molecular mechanism involved in the dynamic coupling of the LH/hCG receptor however, are not known. It has been postulated that receptor aggregation at the molecular level plays a critical role in this process. There have been attempts to understand the receptor association and dissociation phenomena at the molecular level. One of them involves the participation of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I antigen in the mechanism of receptor activation and/or expression. One molecular basis for these mechanisms consists of a physical interaction between MHC proteins and receptors to form "compound receptors" able to transfer a hormonal signal to the cell. Using a photo-reactive probe we demonstrated that the LH/hCG receptors and the class I antigens are closely associated in the membrane. Thus, it is possible to form covalent complexes of hCG and class I antigens through the binding of the hormone to specific receptors. These findings imply that LH/hCG receptors and the MHC class I antigens may interact at the level of the plasma membrane in the mechanism of LH action. We also performed experiments using a single cell and limiting stimulation to a patch of membrane. The results stimulating the cell in a localized area suggested that even if all components are entirely free to float there is a constraint in the localization of the receptor, G-protein, and/or the effector, supporting the constraint dissociation model. Within a limited area subunits could dissociate, but they would not be free to diffuse throughout the membrane. Moreover the concept of compartmentalization that has been utilized to explain some inconsistencies in second-messenger action now can be proved by experimental design.  相似文献   

10.
Single particle tracking was used to evaluate lateral motions of individual FLAG-tagged human luteinizing hormone (LH) receptors expressed on CHO cells and native LH receptors on both KGN human granulosa-derived tumor cells and M17 human neuroblastoma cells before and after exposure to human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). Compared with LH receptors on untreated cells, LH receptors on cells treated with 100 nm hCG exhibit restricted lateral diffusion and are confined in small, nanometer-scale, membrane compartments. Similar to LH receptors labeled with Au-hCG, LH receptors labeled with gold-deglycosylated hCG, an hCG antagonist, also exhibit restricted lateral diffusion and are confined in nanoscale membrane compartments on KGN cells treated with 100 nm hCG. LH receptor point mutants lacking potential palmitoylation sites remain in large compartments despite treatment with 100 nm hCG as do LH receptors on cells treated with cytochalasin D. Finally, both polarization homotransfer fluorescence resonance energy transfer imaging and photon counting histogram analysis indicate that treatment with hCG induces aggregation of YFP-coupled LH receptors stably expressed on CHO cells. Taken together, our results demonstrate that binding of hCG induces aggregation of LH receptors within nanoscale, cell surface membrane compartments, that hCG binding also affects the lateral motions of antagonist binding LH receptors, and that receptor surface densities must be considered in evaluating the extent of hormone-dependent receptor aggregation.  相似文献   

11.
L M Jerry  A K Sullivan 《In vitro》1976,12(3):236-259
The lymphocyte plasma membrane is the locus of events which control the immune response. T and B lymphocytes, which mediate cellular and humoral immunity respectively, show distinctive plasma membrane morphologies and cell surface receptors. The dynamic state of these plasma components is emphasized by their lateral mobility in the fluid plane of the membrane, as well as variation in their structure or expression as the lymphocyte proliferates and differentiates in response to stimulation by antigen or mitogens. The best understood membrane glycoproteins are surface membrane immunoglobulins that serve as antigen receptors on B cells, and the histocompatability-beta2 microglobulin complex that has an immunoglobulin-like structure. Other less well defined surface structures showing modulation during the cell cycle may affect growth regulation of proliferating lymphocytes. Some of these are shared by fetal and neoplastic cells. Major theories of lymphocyte signaling are discussed, and the early events in lymphocyte activation are reviewed. While a complete model encompassing all these early events is not yet possible, the central issues can be usefully discussed in term of receptor-transducer-effector concepts derived by strong parallels from a knowledge of hormone-membrane interactions.  相似文献   

12.
To identify luteinizing hormone (LH) receptors, a monoclonal antibody (MAb) was produced by immunization of Balb/c mice with rat luteal cell membranes. Hybridomas, produced by a method for proteins of low antigenicity, were selected by competition with [125I]-hCG (LH) for luteal membrane binding. Conditions for analysis of LH receptor antibody (IgG2b isotype) binding by immunohistochemistry with an avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex were examined and results compared to localization of bound hCG, to detect receptors. By light microscopy, both bound hCG and the LH receptor antibody were located on luteal cell surfaces. In addition, the LH receptor antibody was associated with luteal cell cytoplasm. Cell surface membrane binding, but not cytoplasmic staining, was reduced in ovaries from rats injected with hCG. By electron microscopy, LH receptor antibody was observed in patches on luteal cell surface membranes and was associated with polysomes, small vesicles, and occasionally with discrete areas of endoplasmic reticulum. Therefore, detection of LH receptors with bound hCG may be limited to receptors found on cell surfaces, while additional LH receptors are revealed by use of a receptor antibody. The cytoplasmic LH receptor may represent stages in the processing of receptor protein. Furthermore, the methodology used in this study should be generally useful for immunohistochemistry with other MAb to receptors.  相似文献   

13.
It is well established that the LH/CG receptor expressed in gonadal cells is an 85- to 92-kilodalton (kDa) glycoprotein. Additionally, however, a number of reports have noted the existence of other putative receptor species, but few attempts have been made to characterize these variant receptor species. A cell line [293L(wt1)] had previously been isolated which expresses large numbers of high affinity cell surface LH/CG receptors. Visualization of the LH/CG receptor species expressed in these cells and in rat luteal cells using ligand blots revealed 85- and 90-kDa LH/CG receptors, respectively, while immunoblots revealed another 68-kDa glycoprotein receptor in both cell types. The presence of both the 85- and 68-kDa receptor species was confirmed using immunoprecipitation and affinity purification of metabolically labeled 293L(wt1) cells. Enzymatic deglycosylations established that the 85-kDa receptor is a sialoprotein, while the 68-kDa species contains exposed high mannose residues. Protease digestion before LH/CG receptor immunoprecipitations localized the 85-kDa receptor on the plasma membrane, while the 68-kDa receptor was shown to be located intracellularly. Pulse-chase experiments were then used to positively establish that the 68-kDa receptor protein is actually a precursor of the 85-kDa LH/CG receptor species.  相似文献   

14.
Large scale aggregation of fluorescein-labeled immunoglobulin E (IgE) receptor complexes on the surface of RBL cells results in the co- aggregation of a large fraction of the lipophilic fluorescent probe 3,3'-dihexadecylindocarbocyanine (diI) that labels the plasma membranes much more uniformly in the absence of receptor aggregation. Most of the diI molecules that are localized in patches of aggregated receptors have lost their lateral mobility as determined by fluorescence photobleaching recovery. The diI outside of patches is mobile, and its mobility is similar to that in control cells without receptor aggregates. It is unlikely that the co-aggregation of diI with IgE receptors is due to specific interactions between these components, as two other lipophilic probes of different structures are also observed to redistribute with aggregated IgE receptors, and aggregation of two other cell surface antigens also results in the coredistribution of diI at the RBL cell surface. Quantitative analysis of CCD images of labeled cells reveals some differences in the spatial distributions of co- aggregated diI and IgE receptors. The results indicate that cross- linking of specific cell surface antigens causes a substantial change in the organization of the plasma membrane by redistributing pre- existing membrane domains or causing their formation.  相似文献   

15.
Cadherin-mediated cell-cell interactions are dynamic processes, and cadherin function is tightly regulated in response to cellular context and signaling. Ultimately, cadherin regulation is likely to reflect the interplay between a range of fundamental cellular processes, including surface organization of receptors, cytoskeletal organization and cell trafficking, that are coordinated by signaling events. In this review we focus on recent advances in understanding how interplay with membrane trafficking and other cell-cell junctions can control cadherin function. The endocytosis of cadherins, and their post-internalization fate, influences surface expression and metabolic stability of these adhesion receptors. Similarly, at the surface, components of tight junctions provide a mode of cross-talk that regulates assembly of adherens junctions.  相似文献   

16.
Signaling in mast cells and basophils is mediated through IgE and its high affinity cell surface receptor, FcepsilonRI. Crosslinking of the receptors by a cognate multivalent antigen leads to degranulation and release of mediators of the allergic immune response. Using multicolor fluorescence confocal microscopy, we probed the spatio-temporal dynamics of early events in the IgE receptor signal cascade. We monitored the recruitment of GFP-/CFP-labeled signaling proteins by acquiring sequential images with time resolution of 3 s during stimulation of RBL-2H3 mast cells with multivalent antigen. A fluorescent tag on the antigen allowed us to visualize the plasma membrane localization of crosslinked receptors, and fluorescent cholera toxin B served as a plasma membrane marker. We developed an automated image analysis scheme to quantify the recruitment of fluorescent intracellular proteins to the plasma membrane and to assess the time-dependent colocalization of these and other membrane-associated proteins with crosslinked receptors as measured by cross-correlation between the plasma membrane distributions of the two fluorophores. This automated method permits analysis of thousands of individual images from multiple experiments for each cross-correlation pair. We systematically applied this analysis to characterize stimulated interactions of IgE receptors with several signaling proteins, including the tyrosine kinases Lyn and Syk, and the adaptor protein LAT. Notably, for Syk-CFP we observed a rapid stimulated translocation to the plasma membrane but very little colocalization with aggregated receptors. Our results demonstrate the utility of this simple, automated method to monitor protein interactions quantitatively during cell signaling.  相似文献   

17.
Fluorescence micrographs of the plasma membrane of cells expressing fluorescently labeled G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) often exhibit small clusters of pixels (or puncta) with intensities that are higher than those of the surrounding pixels. Although studies of GPCR interactions in uniform membrane areas abound, understanding the details of the GPCR interactions within such puncta as well as the nature of the membrane formations underlying the puncta is hampered by the lack of adequate experimental techniques. Here, we introduce an enhancement of a recently developed method termed fluorescence intensity fluctuation spectrometry, which permits analysis of protein-protein interactions within the puncta in live cell membranes. We applied the novel fluorescence intensity fluctuation data analysis protocol to previously published data from cells expressing human secretin receptors and determined that the oligomer size increases with receptor concentration and duration of treatment with cognate ligand, not only within uniform regions of the membrane (in agreement with previous publications) but also within the puncta. In addition, we found that the number density and fractional area of the puncta increased after treatment with ligand. This method could be applied for probing the evolution in the time of the chain of events that begins with ligand binding and continues with coated pits formation and receptor internalization for other GPCRs and, indeed, other membrane receptors in living cells.  相似文献   

18.
Progesterone is produced by granulosa cells under the influence of luteinizing hormone. Nuclear progesterone receptors have been found in rat granulosa cells. Human granulosa-lutein cells rapidly respond to progesterone with an increase in intracellular calcium suggesting the existence of a nongenomic mechanism. This study was conducted to determine whether binding of progesterone to granulosa cells could occur at the membrane. Granulosa cells were obtained from an in vitro fertilization program and examined immunohistochemically with an antiserum to membrane progesterone receptors. Approximately 14-70% of freshly harvested or cultured granulosa cells of six patients showed a positive reaction to the antiserum, limited to the cell membrane. Western blot analysis of homogenates of granulosa cells and a granulosa cell tumour confirmed the presence of progesterone receptors A, B and C and low amounts of a putative membrane receptor. These results demonstrate that the plasma membranes of human granulosa cells possess binding components for progesterone which may be involved in its nongenomic mechanism of action.  相似文献   

19.
We previously showed that, in the context of thymic epithelial cells, thymocyte migration is partially controlled by extracellular matrix (ECM)-mediated interactions. Herein we evaluated whether these interactions could be involved in cell migration related events in the context of non-epithelial cells of the thymic microenvironment, the phagocytic cells of the thymic reticulum (PTR). We first showed, by immunocytochemistry, cytofluorometry, and RT-PCR, that PTR produce ECM components, including fibronectin and laminin, and express the corresponding integrin-type receptors, VLA-4, VLA-5, and VLA-6. Thymocytes adhere onto PTR monolayers, with immature CD4(+)CD8(+) cells being predominant. Importantly, such an adhesion is partially mediated by ECM ligands and receptors, since it was impaired by anti-ECM or anti-ECM receptor antibodies. Conjointly, our data reveal that the ECM-dependence for thymocyte adhesion onto the thymic microenvironment is not restricted to the epithelial cells, being also seen when they encounter non-epithelial phagocytic cells.  相似文献   

20.
As protein–protein interactions (PPIs) are involved in many cellular events, development of mammalian cytosolic PPI detection systems is important for drug discovery as well as understanding biological phenomena. We have previously reported a c-kit-based PPI screening (KIPPIS) system, in which proteins of interest were fused with a receptor tyrosine kinase c-kit, leading to intracellular PPI-dependent cell growth. However, it has not been investigated whether PPI can be detected using other receptors. In this study, we employed a thrombopoietin receptor, which belongs to the Type I cytokine receptor family, to develop a thrombopoietin receptor-based PPI screening (THROPPIS) system. To improve the sensitivity of THROPPIS, we examined two strategies of (i) localization of the chimeric receptors on the cell membrane, and (ii) addition of a helper module to the chimeric receptors. Intriguingly, the nonlocalized chimeric receptor showed the best performance of THROPPIS. Furthermore, the addition of the helper module dramatically improved the detection sensitivity. In total, 5 peptide–domain interactions were detected successfully, demonstrating the versatility of THROPPIS. In addition, a peptide–domain interaction was detected even when insulin receptor or epidermal growth factor receptor was used as a signaling domain, demonstrating that this PPI detection system can be extended to other receptors.  相似文献   

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