首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 109 毫秒
1.
Agonist-induced changes in beta-adrenergic receptors on intact cells   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Competition by beta-adrenergic agonists and antagonists for 125I-pindolol binding sites on intact cells (1321N1 human astrocytoma and C62B rat glioma) was measured using short time binding assays as previously described (Toews, M. L., Harden, T. K., and Perkins, J. P. (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 80, 3553-3557). Preincubation of cells with agonists converted about half of the cellular beta-adrenergic receptors from a form exhibiting high affinity for the agonists isoproterenol and epinephrine and the antagonist sotalol to a form exhibiting much lower apparent affinity for these ligands in short time assays. Exposure to agonists did not alter the affinity of receptors for the antagonist metoprolol. This change in the ligand binding properties of the receptor was rapid (t1/2 = 1-2 min following a lag of about 0.5 min), reversible (t1/2 = 6-8 min), and dependent on the agonist concentration present during the preincubation (K0.5 = 15 nM for isoproterenol). Both isoproterenol and sotalol attained equilibrium with the high affinity receptors very rapidly but equilibrated only slowly with those receptors exhibiting low apparent affinity in short time assays. These results are interpreted in terms of a model which postulates that both the low apparent affinity in short time assays and the subsequent slow equilibration of hydrophilic ligands with these receptors result from agonist-induced internalization of a fraction of cell surface beta-adrenergic receptors. The relationship of this change in receptor binding properties to other aspects of agonist-induced desensitization of the beta-adrenergic receptor-coupled adenylate cyclase system is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
A binding assay has been developed to characterize beta-adrenergic receptors on intact L6 muscle cells. The affinity of beta-adrenergic receptors for the radioligand iodohydroxybenzylpindolol (IHYP) was the same in membrane preparations and in intact cells when determined by either equilibrium binding or kinetic analysis. The number of specific IHYP binding sites per cell was approximately the same on intact cells as on membranes. The pharmacological properties of antagonists indicated that the receptors on intact cells were identical to those on membranes. However, the beta-adrenergic receptors on intact cells had a 100-400 fold lower affinity at equilibrium for the agonist isoproterenol than did beta-adrenergic receptors on membranes. This low affinity of the receptor for agonists as measured by inhibition of radioligand binding in intact cells has also been observed in C6 (2) and S49 (3) cells. Our results suggest that beta receptors on intact cells after a 1 minute incubation was similar to the KD value for isoproterenol measured in membranes at equilibrium in the presence of GTP. After 1-2 minutes of exposure to a low concentration of agonist, binding of IHYP was no longer inhibited. These results suggest that agonists rapidly convert the beta receptors on intact cells to a state which has a low affinity for agonists. The affinity of the receptor for antagonists did not change during the incubation.  相似文献   

3.
Short-term receptor regulation by agonists is a well-known phenomenon for a number of receptors, including beta-adrenergic receptors, and has been associated with receptor changes revealed by radioligand binding. In the present study, we investigated the rapid changes in alpha 1-adrenergic receptors induced by agonists. alpha 1-receptors were studied on DDT1 MF-2 smooth muscle cells (DDT1-MF-2 cells) by specific [3H]prazosin binding. In competition binding on membranes and on intact cells at 4 degrees C or at 37 degrees C in 1-min assays, agonists competed for a single class of sites with relatively high affinity. By contrast, in equilibrium binding at 37 degrees C on intact cells agonists competed with two receptor forms (high- and low-affinity). We quantified the receptors in the high-affinity form by measuring the [3H]prazosin binding inhibited by 20 microM norepinephrine (this concentration selectively saturated the high-affinity sites). The low-affinity sites were measured by subtracting the binding of [3H]prazosin to the high-affinity sites from the total specific binding. High-affinity receptors were 85% of the total sites in binding experiments at 4 degrees C, but only 30% at 37 degrees C. On DDT1-MF-2 cells preequilibrated with [3H]prazosin at 4 degrees C, and then shifted to 37 degrees C for a few minutes, norepinephrine selectively reduced the high-affinity sites by 30%. We suggest that at 4 degrees C it is the native form of alpha 1-receptors that is measured, with most of the sites in the high-affinity form, while during incubation at 37 degrees C the norepinephrine present in the binding assay converts most of the receptors to an apparent low-affinity form, so that they are no longer recognized by 20 microM norepinephrine. The nature of this low-affinity form was further investigated. On DDT1-MF-2 cells preincubated with the agonist and then extensively washed at 4 degrees C (to maintain the receptor changes induced by the agonist) the number of receptors recognized by [3H]prazosin at 4 degrees C was reduced by 38%. After fragmentation of the cells, the number of receptors measured at 4 degrees C was the same in control and norepinephrine-treated cells, suggesting that the disruption of cellular integrity might expose the receptors which are probably sequestered after agonist treatment. In conclusion, the appearance of the low affinity for agonists at 37 degrees C may be due to the agonist-induced sequestration of alpha 1-adrenergic receptors, resulting in a limited accessibility to hydrophilic ligands.  相似文献   

4.
Adrenergic receptor agonists are known to attenuate the proliferative response of human lymphocytes after activation; however, their mechanism of action is unknown. Since expression of interleukin 2 (IL-2) receptors is a prerequisite for proliferation, the effect of beta-adrenergic receptor agonists on lymphocyte IL-2 receptors was studied on both mitogen-stimulated lymphocytes and IL-2-dependent T lymphocyte cell lines. In both cell types the beta-adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol blocked the expression of IL-2 receptors, as determined with the IL-2 receptor anti-TAC antibody. To determine the effect of beta-adrenergic agonists on expression of the high affinity IL-2 receptors, [125I]IL-2 binding studies were performed at concentrations selective for high affinity sites. No significant effect of beta-adrenergic agonists on high affinity IL-2 receptor sites could be detected. The data demonstrate that beta-adrenergic receptor agonists down-regulate IL-2 receptors primarily affecting low affinity sites.  相似文献   

5.
Summary The beta-adrenergic receptor which is coupled to adenylate cyclase in the frog erythrocycte plasma membrane provides a convenient model system for probing the molecular characteristics of an adenylate cyclase coupled hormone receptor. Direct radioligand binding studies with beta-adrenergic agonists and antagonists such as [3H]hydroxybenzylisoproterenol and [3H]dihydroalprenolol have shed new light on the biochemical properties of the receptor as well as on its mode of interaction with other components of the adenylate cyclase system. Agonist binding to the receptor induces a high affinity state of the receptor which can be selectively reverted to a low agonist affinity state by guanyl nucleotides. This agonist-induced high affinity state of the receptor appears to correspond to a receptor moiety which has larger apparent molecular weight and which is probably a complex of the beta-adrenergic receptor and nucleotide regulatory binding protein. Antagonists do not appear capable of inducing or stabilizing the formation of this high affinity receptor-nucleotide site complex.The beta-adrenergic receptors have been solubilized using the plant glycoside digitonin as the detergent and have been highly purified by biospecific affinity chromatography on an alprenolol-agarose affinity support. These highly purified receptor preparations retain all of the binding characteristics observed in the unpurified soluble receptor preparations.Remarkably, antibodies raised in rabbits against affinity chromatography purified preparations of the receptor, themselves bind beta-adrenergic ligands with typical beta-adrenergic specificity. Such antibodies which possess binding sites similar to those of physiological receptors provide useful model systems for further probing the molecular characteristics of beta-adrenergic binding sites.  相似文献   

6.
Dopamine receptors, solubilized from bovine anterior pituitary membranes with the detergent digitonin, retained a typical dopaminergic specificity for the binding of both agonists and antagonists. The affinities of antagonists for binding to the soluble receptors are virtually identical with those observed with the membrane-bound receptors. The affinities of agonists however, correspond to those for the form of the receptors in the membranes having low affinity for those agonists (De Lean, A., Kilpatrick, B. F., and Caron, M. G. (1982) Mol. Pharmacol. 22, 290-297). Thus, after solubilization, agonist high affinity interactions with the receptor and their sensitivity to modulation by guanine nucleotides are lost. However, high affinity agonist binding and its sensitivity to guanine nucleotides can be preserved if the membrane-bound receptors are prelabeled with the agonist [3H]n-propylapomorphine prior to solubilization. In order to investigate the molecular basis for these changes in the properties of agonist binding, the solubilized receptors were characterized by chromatographic procedures. Using molecular exclusion high pressure liquid chromatography, [3H]n-propylapomorphine-prelabeled receptors elute as an apparent larger molecular species than either unlabeled or antagonist [( 3H]spiroperidol)-pre-labeled receptors. Moreover, incubation of the pooled agonist-prelabeled receptor peak with guanine nucleotides effects a decrease in the apparent size of the receptors such that upon rechromatography they elute in a position coincidental with the 3H-antagonist-pre-labeled receptor peak. Thus, occupancy of the receptors by agonists promotes the formation of a guanine nucleotide-sensitive agonist high affinity form of the receptor which is of larger apparent size presumably due to the association of the receptor with a guanine nucleotide regulatory protein.  相似文献   

7.
When adipocyte membranes are successively exposed to (-)-propranolol or (+/- alprenolol at 25 or 4 degrees C, repeatedly washed and then assayed for (-)-[3H]dihydroalprenolol binding, the apparent number of beta-adrenergic binding sites is markedly decreased. Induction of this peculiar type of receptor desensitization does not require prolonged exposure of the membranes to the beta-adrenergic antagonists (half-time: 1 min), is stereospecific, concentration-dependent and almost complete with high concentrations of antagonists. p[NH]ppG, which reduces the affinity of fat cell beta-adrenergic receptors for agonists, does not prevent the antagonist-induced decrease in the receptor number. The magnitude of the desensitizating effect induced separately by (-)-isoproterenol and (-)-propranolol is not additive in membranes exposed to both drugs, suggesting that the receptors lost after exposure to agonists are the same sites as part of those lost after exposure to antagonists. However, contrary to the results found in membranes desensitized by agonists, adenylate cyclase activity remained fully responsive to catecholamines in membranes exposed to beta-antagonists. As shown by kinetic studies on (-)-[3H]dihydroalprenolol binding, this beta-antagonist-induced receptor desensitization is reversible after prolonged incubation. These data which have never yet been described in the other reported desensitizable beta-adrenergic systems, suggest that, when exposed to beta-antagonists, the fat cell beta-adrenergic receptors undergo a conformational change leading to a peculiar state which has low affinity for antagonists but behaves towards agonists as does the receptor in its resting state.  相似文献   

8.
Important differences in binding characteristics between agonists and antagonists of the beta-adrenergic receptor have been described. However, these observations have been complicated since most available antagonists are much more lipophilic than agonists. In order to separate out those binding characteristics of agonist vs. antagonist from those characteristics of lipophilic vs. hydrophilic ligands, we have studied competition of the hydrophilic ligands isoproterenol (agonist) and CGP-12177 (antagonist) with [125I]iodopindolol binding in intact human lymphocytes. Analyzing competition curves from assays performed at 13 degrees C, 25 degrees C and 37 degrees C we demonstrated that at lower temperatures there was a decrease in IC50 for isoproterenol but not for CGP-12177. Using cells preincubated with isoproterenol then extensively washed, competition curves with both isoproterenol and CGP-12177 were biphasic, and characterized by the appearance of a population of receptors with a low affinity for both hydrophilic ligands. Furthermore, at lower temperatures the biphasic nature of these curves was accentuated and was characterized by a 6-fold and 40-fold increase in the apparent KD of a population of low affinity sites for isoproterenol and CGP-12177, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

Desensitization of G-protein coupled receptors following agonist occupancy is accompanied by two temporally distinguishable cellular trafficking phenomena of the receptors referred to as sequestration and down regulation. For the β2-adrenergic receptor, sequestration occurs within minutes of agonist binding and results in a reversible internalization and loss of cell surface receptor binding. With longer occupancy, greater than 1 hour, down regulation results in a variable loss of the complement of cellular receptors. Here we compare the two methods that have been used to monitor these receptor changes, competition of whole cell hydrophobic ligand binding (125I-pindolol) with a hydrophilic ligand (CGP-12177) and now cytometry quantification of immunologically tagged β2-adrenergic receptor. While both methods give reliable results, we show that because of a 1:500 partitioning of the hydrophilic ligand into cells, slightly different conditions should be used to assess basally or agonist stimulated sequestered receptor levels. Using a sequestration defective β2-adrenergic receptor mutant we demonstrate that even though sequestration and down regulation behave as independent processes, sequestration can significantly affect the rate at which receptors are lost by the down regulatory process by removing receptors from the pool of down regulating receptors. A mathematical model expressing these relationships is provided.  相似文献   

10.
beta-Adrenergic receptors from turkey erythrocyte membranes have been purified 1000-4000-fold using alprenolol-Sepharose affinity chromatography. Addition of deoxycholate solubilized egg phosphatidylcholine to the beta-adrenergic receptor, that is 5-10% pure and in 0.1% digitonin, followed by Sephadex G-50 gel filtration in buffers containing 30 mM MgCl2 results in 65-70% of the receptor being incorporated into phospholipid vesicles. The beta-adrenergic receptor as detected by photoaffinity labeling using [125I]azidobenzylpindolol in membranes and after alprenolol-Sepharose chromatography is a Mr = 40,000 peptide. Addition of deoxycholate extracts of human erythrocyte membranes, which contain the guanine nucleotide stimulatory regulatory protein of adenylate cyclase (Ns) but not beta-adrenergic receptor, were used to reconstitute a guanine nucleotide-mediated change in agonist affinity for the receptor. These results demonstrate that the alprenolol-Sepharose affinity purified beta-adrenergic receptor is functional in both ligand binding and coupling to Ns. The procedure is rapid, efficient and should be generally applicable to beta-adrenergic receptor and Ns from several different membrane systems.  相似文献   

11.
Since agonists and temperature affect receptor affinity, and since these factors may influence the actual determination of receptor affinity, we assessed the in vitro effects of temperature and isoproterenol on the high and low affinity states of beta-adrenergic receptors in rat membrane preparations. There was a temperature-dependent decrease in beta-adrenergic receptor agonist affinity which was further promoted by the presence of isoproterenol. The decrease in receptor agonist affinity was reflected by a decrease in the number of receptors in the high affinity state. These data suggest that receptor desensitization may occur in membrane preparations in vitro and that the present methodology used to assess agonist affinity in vitro may itself alter the very properties being measured.  相似文献   

12.
Agonist treatment of C6-glioma cells induces two altered states in beta-adrenergic receptors, a low affinity for the hydrophilic antagonist CGP-12177 and a low affinity for agonists like isoproterenol. We present evidence that, in cells not treated to inhibit receptor internalization, the two properties occur with a different time course, the low affinity for isoproterenol preceding that for CGP-12177. In that the low affinity for CGP-12177 is due to the internalization of the receptor, the results indicate that uncoupling of the receptor, indicated by the low affinity for isoproterenol, occurs while the receptor is still located on the cell surface. Removal of the agonist leads to reappearance of the receptor to the plasma membrane followed by loss of the uncoupled state.  相似文献   

13.
Direct radioligand binding studies have been used to probe the molecular mechanisms whereby agonist catecholamines regulate the function of betaadrenergic receptors in a model system, the frog erythrocyte. The unique characteristics of agonist as opposed to antagonist action are first, the ability to stimulate the adenylate cyclase through the receptor and second, the ability to desensitize the system by alterations induced in beta-adrenergic receptors. These properties of agonist are not shared by antagonist despite the high affinity and specificity of antagonist binding to the beta-adrenergic receptors. Agonist and antagonist receptor complexes may be distinguished in a variety of ways including differences in their sensitivity to regulatory guanine nucleotides and also by gel chromatography on AcA 34 Ultragel. The agonist receptor complex appears to elute from the columns with an apparently increased size. A “dynamic receptor affinity model” of beta-adrenergic receptor action is proposed which features several distinct conformational states of the receptor. Agonists have much higher affinity for the physiologically active or coupled state of the receptor, whereas antagonists have equal affinity for both. In addition, a third “desensitized” state of the receptor is also postulated to exist.  相似文献   

14.
The ability of muscarinic receptors, present in either the cell surface or sequestered compartments of intact human SK-N-SH neuroblastoma cells, to stimulate phosphoinositide hydrolysis has been examined. When cells were first exposed to carbachol for 1 h at 37 degrees C, approximately 50% of the cell surface receptors became sequestered, and this was accompanied by a comparable reduction in the subsequent ability of muscarinic agonists to stimulate phosphoinositide turnover, as monitored by the release of labeled inositol phosphates at 10 degrees C. At this temperature, muscarinic receptor cycling between the two cell compartments is prevented. Upon warming the carbachol-pretreated cells to 37 degrees C, receptor cycling is reinitiated and stimulated phosphoinositide turnover is fully restored within 5-8 min. When measured at 10 degrees C, the reduction of stimulated phosphoinositide turnover observed following carbachol pretreatment was similar in magnitude for both hydrophilic (carbachol, oxotremorine-M) and lipophilic (arecoline, oxotremorine-2, and L-670,548) agonists. The loss of response for both groups of agonists could be prevented if the incubation temperature was maintained at 37 degrees C, rather than at 10 degrees C. At the latter temperature carbachol pretreatment of SK-N-SH cells reduced the maximum release of inositol phosphates elicited by either carbachol or L-670,548 but not the agonist concentrations required for half-maximal stimulation. Radioligand binding studies, carried out at 10 degrees C, indicate that following receptor sequestration, significantly higher concentrations of carbachol were required to occupy the available muscarinic receptor sites. In contrast the lipophilic full agonist L-670,548 recognized receptors present in control and carbachol-pretreated cells with comparable affinities. Analysis of the inositol lipids present after carbachol pretreatment indicate that only a minimal depletion of the substrates necessary for phospholipase C activation had occurred. The results indicate that the agonist-induced sequestration of muscarinic receptors from the cell surface results in a loss of stimulated phosphoinositide hydrolysis when measured under conditions in which the return of the sequestered receptors to the cell surface is prevented. Thus, only those receptors present at the cell surface are linked to phospholipase C activation.  相似文献   

15.
Activation of porcine splenocytes with the mitogen, concanavalin A, increases the number of glucocorticoid and beta-adrenergic receptors with no change in the apparent dissociation constant. Incubation of splenocytes with concanavalin A in the presence of hydrocortisone 21-sodium succinate prevented this mitogen-induced increase in glucocorticoid receptors. Isoproterenol also prevented the concanavalin A-induced increase in beta-adrenoceptors at 24 hr and reduced the binding affinity of these receptors at 48 hr. Neither agonist had any significant effect on the receptor number of binding affinity of nonstimulated cells. These data demonstrate that the increase in the number of glucocorticoid and beta-adrenergic receptors that occur on lymphoid cells after activation by a T-cell mitogen can be prevented by appropriate hormone agonists. Down-regulation of receptor number by appropriate agonists appears to be a common regulatory system that is shared by both the neuroendocrine and the immune systems.  相似文献   

16.
We investigated the binding characteristics of agonists to alpha 1- and beta-adrenergic receptors of intact liver cells, broken rat liver cell membranes, and detergent-solubilized preparations under varying experimental conditions, focusing on the different "states" of the receptor for agonists and the regulation of these states by temperature and guanine nucleotides. While only low-affinity binding of agonists to both receptor subtypes was evident in studies performed at 37 degrees C with solubilized preparations, biphasic competition curves for agonists were observed in both intact cells and membrane preparations; the majority of sites were of low affinity. In membrane preparations, the nonhydrolyzable GTP analogue Gpp(NH)p caused a rightward shift of agonist competition curves and a loss of high-affinity binding. These results are consistent with the involvement of guanine nucleotide binding proteins in both alpha 1- and beta-adrenergic transduction pathways. When competition studies were performed at 4 degrees C, receptor sites existed predominantly in the high-affinity configuration, in intact cells and membranes, as well as in soluble preparations. In contrast to the studies conducted at 37 degrees C, no Gpp(NH)p-induced conversion to the lower affinity state could be demonstrated in studies performed with membrane preparations at 4 degrees C. Thus, the high-affinity state of alpha 1- and beta-adrenergic receptors is stabilized at 4 degrees C in intact cells, membranes, and soluble preparations. After incubations had been performed at 37 degrees C, high-affinity binding of agonists could not be restored by subsequent incubation at 4 degrees C.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Short-term receptor regulation by agonists is a well-known phenomenon for a number of receptors, including β-adrenergic receptors, and has been associated with receptor changes revealed by radioligand binding. In the present study, we investigated the rapid changes in α1-adrenergic receptors induced by agonists. α1-receptors were studied on DDT1 MF-2 smooth muscle cells (DDT1-MF-2 cells) by specific [3H]prazosin binding. In competition binding on membranes and on intact cells at 4°C or at 37°C in 1-min assays, agonists competed for a single class of sites with relatively high affinity. By contrast, in equilibrium binding at 37°C on intact cells agonists competed with two receptor forms (high- and low-affinity). We quantified the receptors in the high-affinity form by measuring the [3H]prazosin binding inhibited by 20 μM norepinephrine (this concentration selectively saturated the high-affinity sites). The low-affinity sites were measured by subtracting the binding of [3H]prazosin to the high-affinity sites from the total specific binding. High-affinity receptors were 85% of the total sites in binding experiments at 4°C, but only 30% at 37°C. On DDT1-MF-2 cells preequilibrated with [3H]prazosin at 4°C, and then shifted to 37°C for a few minutes, norepinephrine selectively reduced the high-affinity sites by 30%. We suggest that at 4°C it is the native form of α1-receptors that is measured, with most of the sites in the high-affinity form, while during incubation at 37°C the norepinephrine present in the binding assay converts most of the receptors to an apparent low-affinity form, so that they are no longer recognized by 20 μM norepinephrine. The nature of this low-affinity form was further investigated. On DDT1-MF-2 cells preincubated with the agonist and then extensively washed at 4°C (to maintain the receptor changes induced by the agonist) the number of receptors recognized by [3H]prazosin at 4°C was reduced by 38%. After fragmentation of the cells, the number of receptors measured at 4°C was the same in control and norepinephrine-treated cells, suggesting that the disruption of cellular integrity might expose the receptors which are probably sequestered after agonist treatment. In conclusion, the appearance of the low affinity for agonists at 37°C may be due to the agonist-induced sequestration of α1-adrenergic receptors, resulting in a limited accessibility to hydrophilic ligands.  相似文献   

18.
Agonist-regulated redistribution of human beta 2-adrenergic receptors was examined in 293 cells. A specific antiserum recognizing the carboxyl-terminal hydrophilic domain of the receptor was developed, characterized, and used for immunocytochemical localization of receptors in fixed cells by conventional fluorescence and confocal fluorescence microscopy. The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol induced redistribution of receptors from the surface of cells into small (less than 1 micron diameter) punctuate accumulations which were detected in cells within 2 min of agonist addition. The time course of receptor redistribution paralleled that of receptor sequestration measured by ligand binding, and receptor redistribution was reversible in the presence of the beta-adrenergic antagonist alprenolol. Optical sections imaged through cells by confocal microscopy localized receptor accumulations within the cytoplasm. To address the question of receptor internalization further, a mutant receptor possessing an engineered antigenic epitope in the amino-terminal hydrophilic domain was constructed, transfected into cells, and localized using both a monoclonal antibody recognizing the epitope tag (receptor ectodomain) and an antiserum recognizing the carboxyl terminus (receptor endodomain). In untreated cells most receptor antigen was detected at the cell surface, as assessed by accessibility to ectodomain antibodies in unpermeabilized specimens. In isoproterenol-treated cells, however, little receptor antigen was detected at the cell surface. Punctate receptor accumulations present in isoproterenol-treated cells were labeled by antibodies only following permeabilization of cells, as expected if these receptor accumulations were intracellular. Finally, internalized beta-adrenergic receptors colocalized with transferrin receptors, which are markers of endosomal membranes. These data provide several lines of evidence establishing that beta-adrenergic receptors undergo ligand-regulated internalization, they suggest that internalized receptors may be recycled back to the cell surface, and they provide the first direct indication that these processes involve the same endosomal membrane system passaged by constitutively recycling receptors.  相似文献   

19.
We have utilized limited in situ trypsinization of the adenylate cyclase-coupled beta-adrenergic receptor of frog erythrocytes to probe the processes of receptor activation, desensitization, and recycling. Treatment of intact erythrocytes with trypsin (1 mg/ml) for 1 h at 20 degrees C converts all the receptor peptides (identified by photoaffinity labeling with p-azido-125I-benzylcarazolol) from a Mr approximately 58,000 to a Mr approximately 40,000 species. Nonetheless, the trypsinized beta-adrenergic receptors bind agonists and antagonists with unaltered affinity and with no change in the number of binding sites. Moreover, the ability of the proteolyzed receptors to interact with the nucleotide regulatory protein to form a high affinity guanine nucleotide-sensitive state and to activate adenylate cyclase were also unaltered. However, upon exposure of intact cells to the agonist isoproterenol, trypsinized beta-adrenergic receptors were more rapidly and more completely cleared from the plasma membranes ("down-regulated") than untrypsinized receptors. Whereas down-regulated receptors from nontrypsinized cells appear to recycle to the cell surface after removal of the agonist, internalized trypsinized beta-adrenergic receptors do not recycle to the plasma membrane and appear to be degraded within the cell. Moreover, when internalized receptors, recovered in a light vesicle fraction, were fused with a heterologous adenylate cyclase system, untreated but not trypsinized receptors reconstituted catecholamine stimulation of the enzyme. These data suggest that the beta-adrenergic receptor contains a trypsin-sensitive site which is exposed on the outer surface of the plasma membrane. Proteolysis at this site releases a fragment which though not critically involved in either ligand binding or "effector coupling" might be important for anchoring the receptors in the plasma membrane. These data also suggest that in situ proteolysis of the receptors might serve as a physiological trigger for their internalization and degradation.  相似文献   

20.
The activity of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) can be modulated by a diverse spectrum of drugs ranging from full agonists to partial agonists, antagonists, and inverse agonists. The vast majority of these ligands compete with native ligands for binding to orthosteric binding sites. Allosteric ligands have also been described for a number of GPCRs. However, little is known about the mechanism by which these ligands modulate the affinity of receptors for orthosteric ligands. We have previously reported that Zn(II) acts as a positive allosteric modulator of the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (beta(2)AR). To identify the Zn(2+) binding site responsible for the enhancement of agonist affinity in the beta(2)AR, we mutated histidines located in hydrophilic sequences bridging the seven transmembrane domains. Mutation of His-269 abolished the effect of Zn(2+) on agonist affinity. Mutations of other histidines had no effect on agonist affinity. Further mutagenesis of residues adjacent to His-269 demonstrated that Cys-265 and Glu-225 are also required to achieve the full allosteric effect of Zn(2+) on agonist binding. Our results suggest that bridging of the cytoplasmic extensions of TM5 and TM6 by Zn(2+) facilitates agonist binding. These results are in agreement with recent biophysical studies demonstrating that agonist binding leads to movement of TM6 relative to TM5.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号