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1.
Molecular modeling of conformational changes occurring in the transmembrane region of the complement factor 5a receptor (C5aR) during receptor activation was performed by comparing two constitutively active mutants (CAMs) of C5aR, NQ (I124N/L127Q), and F251A, to those of the wild-type C5aR and NQ-N296A (I124N/L127Q/N296A), which have the wild-type phenotype. Modeling involved comprehensive sampling of various rotations of TM helices aligned to the crystal template of the dark-adapted rhodopsin along their long axes. By assuming that the relative energies of the spontaneously activated states of CAMs should be lower or at least comparable to energies characteristic for the ground states, we selected the plausible models for the conformational states associated with constitutive activation in C5aR. The modeling revealed that the hydrogen bonds between the side chains of D82-N119, S85-N119, and S131-C221 characteristic for the ground state were replaced by the hydrogen bonds D82-N296, N296-Y300, and S131-R134, respectively, in the activated states. Also, conformational transitions that occurred upon activation were hindered by contacts between the side chains of L127 and F251. The results rationalize the available data of mutagenesis in C5aR and offer the first specific molecular mechanism for the loss of constitutive activity in NQ-N296A. Our results also contributed to understanding the general structural mechanisms of activation in G-protein-coupled receptors lacking the "ionic lock", R(3.50) and E/D(6.30). Importantly, these results were obtained by modeling approaches that deliberately simplify many elements in order to explore potential conformations of GPCRs involving large-scale molecular movements.  相似文献   

2.
Agonist-induced rigid body motion of transmembrane (TM) helices has been established as a unifying mechanism in the activation of the G protein-coupled receptors. In attempts to measure specific conformational transitions during the activation of the type 1 receptor for angiotensin II (AT(1)), we found a decrease in accessibility of Cys(76) in the second TM helix, suggesting that the orientation of TM2 is altered (Miura, S., and Karnik, S. S. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 24299-24305). Now we provide evidence that the TM2 helical movement plays a role in regulating the activated state of the AT(1) receptor, and this role may involve an interaction between TM2 and TM7. Alanine substitution of native Cys(296) in TM7 leads to increased accessibility of Cys(289) and diminished response to bound agonist. Both effects of the C296A mutation are suppressed when combined with F77A and N111G mutants. The TM7 conformation and the sensitivity of Cys(289) altered by C296A mutation are suppressed by the F77A mutation in TM2 to salvage function. We show that the F77A mutant alters orientation of both TM2 and TM7 but does not induce constitutive activity in suppressing the C296A mutant effects. Thus, interaction of TM2 and TM7 is important for transmembrane signal transduction in the AT(1) receptor.  相似文献   

3.
It is well established that leukocyte chemotactic receptors, a subset of G protein-coupled receptors, undergo endocytosis after stimulation by ligand. However, the significance of this phenomenon to cell motility and other important leukocyte functions induced by chemoattractants has not been clearly defined. Here we show that in primary human neutrophils, the threshold levels of agonist required for endocytosis of the chemotactic receptors CXCR1 and CXCR2 were approximately 10-fold or higher than those needed for maximal chemotactic and calcium flux responses. Moreover, when stimulated by agonists at concentrations that are high enough for chemotaxis but too low for receptor endocytosis, neutrophil CXCR1 and CXCR2 could be reactivated in response to repeated application of the same agonist. Both receptors were excluded from Triton X-100-insoluble lipid rafts, and at high agonist concentrations were rapidly endocytosed by a clathrin/rab5/dynamin-dependent pathway. These data support the conclusion that neutrophil migration in response to CXCR1 or CXCR2 agonists is not dependent on endocytosis of CXCR1 or CXCR2. Rather than being integral to the process of cell migration, receptor endocytosis may be a terminal stop signal when cells reach the focus of inflammation where the chemoattractant concentrations are the highest.  相似文献   

4.
Like many other cell surface receptors, transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) receptors are internalized upon ligand stimulation. Given that the signaling-facilitating molecules Smad anchor for receptor activation (SARA) and Hrs are mainly localized in early endosomes, it was unclear whether receptor internalization is required for Smad2 activation. Using reversible biotin labeling, we directly monitored internalization of the TGF-beta type I receptor. Our data indicate that TGF-beta type I receptor is endocytosed via a clathrin-dependent mechanism and is effectively blocked by depletion of intracellular potassium or by expression of a mutant dynamin (K44A). However, blockage of receptor endocytosis by these two means has no effect on TGF-beta-mediated Smad2 activation. Furthermore, TGF-beta-induced Smad2 activation was unaffected by inhibition of hVPS34 activity with wortmannin or inhibitory anti-hVPS34 antibodies. Finally, we demonstrated that Smad2 interacted with cell surface receptors and that a SARA binding-deficient Smad2 mutant was phosphorylated by the receptors. Thus, our findings suggest that receptor endocytosis is dispersible for TGF-beta-mediated activation of Smad2 and that this activation can be mediated by both SARA-dependent and -independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
Interacting residues in an activated state of a G protein-coupled receptor   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ste2p, the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) for the tridecapeptide pheromone alpha-factor of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, was used as a model GPCR to investigate the role of specific residues in the resting and activated states of the receptor. Using a series of biological and biochemical analyses of wild-type and site-directed mutant receptors, we identified Asn(205) as a potential interacting partner with the Tyr(266) residue. An N205H/Y266H double mutant showed pH-dependent functional activity, whereas the N205H receptor was non-functional and the Y266H receptor was partially active indicating that the histidine 205 and 266 residues interact in an activated state of the receptor. The introduction of N205K or Y266D mutations into the P258L/S259L constitutively active receptor suppressed the constitutive activity; in contrast, the N205K/Y266D/P258L/S259L quadruple mutant was fully constitutively active, again indicating an interaction between residues at the 205 and 206 positions in the receptor-active state. To further test this interaction, we introduced the N205C/Y266C, F204C/Y266C, and N205C/A265C double mutations into wild-type and P258L/S259L constitutively active receptors. After trypsin digestion, we found that a disulfide-cross-linked product, with the molecular weight expected for a receptor fragment with a cross-link between N205C and Y266C, formed only in the N205C/Y266C constitutively activated receptor. This study represents the first experimental demonstration of an interaction between specific residues in an active state, but not the resting state, of Ste2p. The information gained from this study should contribute to an understanding of the conformational differences between resting and active states in GPCRs.  相似文献   

6.
Melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) is a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) that binds alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) and has a central role in the regulation of appetite and energy expenditure. Most GPCRs are endocytosed following binding to the agonist and receptor desensitization. Other GPCRs are internalized and recycled back to the plasma membrane constitutively, in the absence of the agonist. In unstimulated neuroblastoma cells and immortalized hypothalamic neurons, epitopetagged MC4R was localized both at the plasma membrane and in an intracellular compartment. These two pools of receptors were in dynamic equilibrium, with MC4R being rapidly internalized and exocytosed. In the absence of alpha-MSH, a fraction of cell surface MC4R localized together with transferrin receptor and to clathrin-coated pits. Constitutive MC4R internalization was impaired by expression of a dominant negative dynamin mutant. Thus, MC4R is internalized together with transferrin receptor by clathrin-dependent endocytosis. Cell exposure toalpha-MSH reduced the amount of MC4R at the plasma membrane by blocking recycling of a fraction of internalized receptor, rather than by increasing its rate of endocytosis. The data indicate that, in neuronal cells, MC4R recycles constitutively and that alpha-MSH modulates MC4R residency at the plasma membrane by acting at an intracellular sorting step.  相似文献   

7.
We have introduced a series of point mutations into the human opioid receptor-like (ORL1) receptor and characterized them for their ability to constitutively activate G protein-coupled receptor signalling pathways. Among the 12 mutants generated, mutation at Asn133 (N133W) gave increased basal signalling through three separate pathways. N133W increased the basal activity of G14- and G16-dependent pathways by two- to three-fold. The constitutive activity of the mutant was confirmed by the finding that the enhanced activity is dependent on the level of receptor expression. In HEK-293 cells stably expressing N133W, signalling through Gi/o-dependent pathways was also observed. Radioligand binding studies revealed that the affinity for nociceptin of the wild-type ORL1 receptor and the N133W mutant do not differ significantly, suggesting that the ligand binding and signalling functions of constitutively active mutants of G protein-coupled receptors are not necessarily intrinsically linked. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that a mutation in the third transmembrane domain is able to increase the basal signalling activity of the human ORL1 receptor.  相似文献   

8.
Leptin receptors are constitutively endocytosed in a ligand-independent manner. To study their endocytosis, leptin receptors OB-Ra and OB-Rb were expressed in HeLa cells. Both receptor isoforms were ubiquitylated, internalized by clathrin-mediated endocytosis and transported to Hrs-positive endosomes after their internalization. Proteasome inhibitors inhibited OB-Ra but not OB-Rb internalization from the cell surface. OB-Ra ubiquitylation occurred on lysine residues K877 and K889 in the cytoplasmic tail, the mutation of which abolished OB-Ra internalization. Fusion of an ubiquitin molecule at the C-terminus of an OB-Ra construct defective both in ubiquitylation and endocytosis restored clathrin-dependent endocytosis of the receptor. The internalization of this constitutively mono-ubiquitylated construct was no longer sensitive to proteasome inhibitors, which inhibited OB-Ra endocytosis by blocking its ubiquitylation. Fusion of an ubiquitin molecule to a transferrin receptor deleted from its own endocytosis motif restored clathrin-mediated endocytosis. We propose that mono-ubiquitin conjugates act as internalization motifs for clathrin-dependent endocytosis of leptin receptor OB-Ra.  相似文献   

9.
Most G protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) are rapidly internalized upon agonist stimulation. From the large number of studies available to date on receptor endocytosis, substantial differences seem to exist among GPCRs in terms of both the molecular pathways of receptor internalization and the biological significance of this process. The aim of this review is to outline common themes in GPCR endocytosis and to delineate true phenotypic variations, which reflect specific necessities for receptor's function.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Ligand recognition has been extensively explored in G protein-coupled A(1), A(2A), and A(2B) adenosine receptors but not in the A(3) receptor, which is cerebroprotective and cardioprotective. We mutated several residues of the human A(3) adenosine receptor within transmembrane domains 3 and 6 and the second extracellular loop, which have been predicted by previous molecular modeling to be involved in the ligand recognition, including His(95), Trp(243), Leu(244), Ser(247), Asn(250), and Lys(152). The N250A mutant receptor lost the ability to bind both radiolabeled agonist and antagonist. The H95A mutation significantly reduced affinity of both agonists and antagonists. In contrast, the K152A (EL2), W243A (6.48), and W243F (6.48) mutations did not significantly affect the agonist binding but decreased antagonist affinity by approximately 3-38-fold, suggesting that these residues were critical for the high affinity of A(3) adenosine receptor antagonists. Activation of phospholipase C by wild type (WT) and mutant receptors was measured. The A(3) agonist 2-chloro-N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl)-5'-N-methylcarbamoyladenosine stimulated phosphoinositide turnover in the WT but failed to evoke a response in cells expressing W243A and W243F mutant receptors, in which agonist binding was less sensitive to guanosine 5'-gamma-thiotriphosphate than in WT. Thus, although not important for agonist binding, Trp(243) was critical for receptor activation. The results were interpreted using a rhodopsin-based model of ligand-A(3) receptor interactions.  相似文献   

12.
Recently, G protein-coupled receptors activated solely by synthetic ligands (RASSLs) have been introduced as new tools to study Galpha(i) signaling in vivo (1, 2). Also, Galpha(s)-coupled G protein-coupled receptors have been engineered to generate Galpha(s)-coupled RASSLs (3, 4). In this study, we exploited the differences in binding pockets between different classes of H(1) receptor agonists and identified the first Galpha(q/11)-coupled RASSL. The mutant human H(1) receptor F435A (6.55) combines a strongly decreased affinity (25-fold) and potency for the endogenous ligand histamine (200-fold) with improved affinities (54-fold) and potencies (2600-fold) for 2-phenylhistamines, a synthetic class of H(1) receptor agonists. Molecular dynamics simulations provided a mechanism for distinct agonist binding to both wild-type and F435A mutant H(1) receptors.  相似文献   

13.
The P2Y1 receptor is a membrane-bound G protein-coupled receptor stimulated by adenine nucleotides. Using alanine scanning mutagenesis, the role in receptor activation of charged amino acids (Asp, Glu, Lys, and Arg) and cysteines in the extracellular loops (EL) of the human P2Y1 receptor has been investigated. The mutant receptors were expressed in COS-7 cells and measured for stimulation of phospholipase C induced by the potent agonist 2-methylthioadenosine-5'-diphosphate (2-MeSADP). In addition to single point mutations, all receptors carried the hemagglutinin epitope at the N- terminus for detection of cell-surface expression. The C124A and C202A mutations, located near the exofacial end of transmembrane helix 3 and in EL2, respectively, ablated phospholipase C stimulation by 1000-fold greater than for the wild-type receptor. The double mutant receptor C42A/C296A exhibited no additive shift in the concentration-response curve for 2-MeSADP. These data suggest that Cys42 and Cys296 form another disulfide bridge in the extracellular region, which is critical for activation. Replacement of charged amino acids produced only minor changes in receptor activation, with two remarkable exceptions. The E209A mutant receptor (EL2) exhibited a >1000-fold shift in EC50. However, if Glu209 were substituted with amino acids capable of hydrogen bonding (Asp, Gln, or Arg), the mutant receptors responded like the wild-type receptor. Arg287 in EL3 was impaired similarly to Glu209 when substituted by alanine. Substitution of Arg287 by lysine, another positively charged residue, failed to fully restore wild-type activity.  相似文献   

14.
The diverse cellular changes brought about by the expression of a constitutively active receptor are poorly understood. QBI-human embryonic kidney 293A cells stably expressing the constitutively active N111G-AT(1) receptor (N111G cells) showed elevated levels of inositol phosphates and frequent spontaneous intracellular Ca(2+) oscillations. Interestingly, Ca(2+) transients triggered with maximal doses of angiotensin II were much weaker in N111G cells than in wild-type cells. These blunted responses were observed independently of the presence or absence of extracellular Ca(2+) and were also obtained when endogenous muscarinic and purinergic receptors were activated, revealing a heterologous desensitization process. The desensitized component of the Ca(2+) signaling cascade was neither the G protein G(q) nor phospholipase C. The intracellular Ca(2+) store of N111G cells and their mechanism of Ca(2+) entry also appeared to be intact. The most striking adaptive response of N111G cells was a down-regulation of their inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP(3)R) as revealed by reduced IP(3)-induced Ca(2+) release, lowered [(3)H]IP(3) binding capacity, diminished IP(3)R immunoreactivity, and accelerated IP(3)R degradation involving the lysosomal pathway. Treatment with the inverse agonist EXP3174 reversed the desensitized phenotype of N111G cells. Down-regulation of IP(3)R represents a reversible adaptive response to protect cells against the adverse effects of constitutively active Ca(2+)-mobilizing receptors.  相似文献   

15.
Janus kinases are essential for signal transduction by a variety of cytokine receptors and when inappropriately activated can cause hematopoietic disorders and oncogenesis. Consequently, it can be predicted that the interaction of the kinases with receptors and the events required for activation are highly controlled. In a screen to identify phosphorylation events regulating Jak2 activity in EpoR signaling, we identified a mutant (Jak2-Y613E) which has the property of being constitutively activated, as well as an inactivating mutation (Y766E). Although no evidence was obtained to indicate that either site is phosphorylated in signaling, the consequences of the Y613E mutation are similar to those observed with recently described activating mutations in Jak2 (Jak2-V617F and Jak2-L611S). However, unlike the V617F or L611S mutant, the Y613E mutant requires the presence of the receptor but not Epo stimulation for activation and downstream signaling. The properties of the Jak2-Y613E mutant suggest that under normal conditions, Jak2 that is not associated with a receptor is locked into an inactive state and receptor binding through the FERM domain relieves steric constraints, allowing the potential to be activated with receptor engagement.  相似文献   

16.
A number of studies have demonstrated that a major portion of the ligand binding site of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor is near cysteines 192 and 193 of the alpha subunit. The role of conserved tyrosine and aspartate residues within this region in ligand binding and receptor activation was investigated using a combination of site-directed mutagenesis and expression in Xenopus oocytes. Wild-type receptors are half-maximally activated (K1/2) by 20 microM acetylcholine with a Hill coefficient, n, of 1.9. Substitution of alpha Y190 and alpha Y198 with phenylalanines (alpha Y190F, alpha Y198F) or alpha D200 with asparagine (alpha D200N) shifts the K1/2 to 408, 117, and 75 microM, respectively, with no effect on the Hill coefficient. To further study the effects of these mutations on activation, the responses of the receptors to the partial agonists phenyltrimethylammonium (PTMA) and tetramethylammonium (TMA) were examined. Wild-type receptors are half-maximally activated by 73 microM PTMA and 2 mM TMA. In contrast, alpha Y190F, alpha Y198F, and alpha D200N receptors are not activated by PTMA and TMA by concentrations of up to 500 microM or 5 mM, respectively. However, PTMA and TMA do act as competitive antagonists of the mutant receptors, an indication that the binding of these compounds is not abolished by these mutations. Comparison of the the Ki values for TMA and PTMA inhibition with the K 1/2 values for TMA and PTMA activation of wild-type receptors indicates that the affinities of these compounds are similar in wild-type and mutant receptors. Therefore, alpha Y190F, alpha Y198F, and alpha D200N mutations do not significantly alter the affinity of the ligand binding site; rather, these mutations appear to interfere with the coupling of ligand binding to channel opening.  相似文献   

17.
Chen S  Lin F  Xu M  Hwa J  Graham RM 《The EMBO journal》2000,19(16):4265-4271
alpha(1)-adrenergic receptors (alpha(1)-ARs) are members of the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily and activate inositol phosphate (IP) turnover. We show that glycine and asparagine mutations of Phe303 in transmembrane segment VI (TMVI) of the alpha(1B)-AR, a highly conserved residue in GPCRs, although increasing agonist affinity, abolish agonist-activated IP signalling. Co-expression of the Phe303 mutants also inhibited (-)epinephrine-stimulated IP signalling by wild-type alpha(1B)-AR and other G(q)-coupled receptors, as well as IP signalling mediated by AlF(4)(-) stimulation of both wild-type G(q alpha) and a constitutively active mutant. The inability of the Phe303 mutants to signal is due to induction of a receptor conformation that dissociates G-protein binding from activation. As a result, the Phe303 mutants sequester G(q alpha) and stoichiometrically inhibit Gq signalling in a dominant-negative manner. We further show that both the enhanced basal and agonist-stimulated IP-signalling activity of the constitutively active alpha(1B)-AR mutants, C128F and A293E, are inhibited in the double mutants, C128F/F303G and A293E/F303G. Phe303, therefore, appears to be critically involved in coupling TMVI alpha-helical movement, a key step in receptor activation, to activation of the cognate G-protein.  相似文献   

18.
The interaction of activated G protein-coupled receptors with G proteins is a key event in signal transduction. Here, using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based assay, we measure directly and in living cells the interaction of YFP-labeled alpha(2A)-adrenergic receptors with CFP-labeled G proteins. Upon agonist stimulation, a small, concentration-dependent increase in FRET was observed. No specific basal FRET was detected in the absence of agonist. Kinetics of the onset of receptor/G protein interaction were <100 ms and depended on expression levels of Galpha. Simultaneously recorded G protein-regulated inwardly rectifying K(+) channel currents revealed a maximal current response already at agonist concentrations producing submaximal FRET amplitudes. By analyzing FRET signals in the presence of a Galpha mutant, which dissociates more slowly from activated receptors, it was demonstrated that only a fraction of wild-type G proteins interacts with the activated receptor at any time. Our data suggest that alpha(2A)-adrenergic receptors and G proteins interact by rapid collision coupling and indicate that there is no significant precoupling between these receptors and G proteins.  相似文献   

19.
After stimulation with agonist, G protein coupled receptors (GPCR) undergo conformational changes that allow activation of G proteins to transduce the signal, followed by phosphorylation by kinases and arrestin binding to promote receptor internalization. Actual paradigm, based on a study of GPCR-A/rhodopsin family, suggests that a network of interactions between conserved residues located in transmembrane (TM) domains (mainly TM3, TM6 and TM7) is involved in the molecular switch leading to GPCR activation.

We evaluated in CHO cells expressing the VPAC1 receptor the role of the third transmembrane helix in agonist signalling by point mutation into Ala of the residues highly conserved in the secretin-family of receptors: Y224, N229, F230, W232, E236, G237, Y239, L240. N229A VPAC1 mutant was characterized by a decrease in both potency and efficacy of VIP stimulated adenylate cyclase activity, by the absence of agonist stimulated [Ca2+]i increase, by a preserved receptor recognition of agonists and antagonist and by a preserved sensitivity to GTP suggesting the importance of that residue for efficient G protein activation. N229D mutant was not expressed at the membrane, and the N229Q with a conserved mutation was less affected than the A mutant. Agonist stimulated phosphorylation and internalization of N229A and N229Q VPAC1 were unaffected. However, the re-expression of internalized mutant receptors, but not that of the wild type receptor, was rapidly reversed after VIP washing. Receptor phosphorylation, internalization and re-expression may be thus dissociated from G protein activation and linked to another active conformation that may influence its trafficking.

Mutation of that conserved amino acid in VPAC2 could be investigated only by a conservative mutation (N216Q) and led to a receptor with a low VIP stimulation of adenylate cyclase, receptor phosphorylation and internalization. This indicated the importance of the conserved N residue in the TM3 of that family of receptors.  相似文献   


20.
Several models of activation mechanisms were proposed for G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), yet no direct methods exist for their elucidation. The availability of constitutively active mutants has given an opportunity to study active receptor conformations within acceptable limits using models such as the angiotensin II type 1 (AT1)1 receptor mutant N111G-hAT1 which displays an important constitutive activity. Recently, by using methionine proximity assay, we showed for the hAT1 receptor that TMD III, VI, and VII form the ligand-binding pocket of the C-terminal amino acid of an antagonistic AngII analogue. In the present contribution, we investigated whether the same residues would also constitute the ligand-binding contacts in constitutively activated mutant (CAM) receptors. For this purpose, the same Met mutagenesis strategy was carried out on the N111G double mutants. Analysis of 43 receptors mutants in the N111G-hAT1 series, photolabeled and CNBr digested, showed that there were only subtle structural changes between the wt-receptor and its constitutively active form.  相似文献   

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