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Paracrine Transactivation of the CB1 Cannabinoid Receptor by AT1 Angiotensin and Other Gq/11 Protein-coupled Receptors
Authors:Gábor Turu  Péter Várnai  Pál Gyombolai  László Szidonya  László Offertaler  Gy?rgy Bagdy  George Kunos  László Hunyady
Abstract:Intracellular signaling systems of G protein-coupled receptors are well established, but their role in paracrine regulation of adjacent cells is generally considered as a tissue-specific mechanism. We have shown previously that AT1 receptor (AT1R) stimulation leads to diacylglycerol lipase-mediated transactivation of co-expressed CB1Rs in Chinese hamster ovary cells. In the present study we detected a paracrine effect of the endocannabinoid release from Chinese hamster ovary, COS7, and HEK293 cells during the stimulation of AT1 angiotensin receptors by determining CB1 cannabinoid receptor activity with bioluminescence resonance energy transfer-based sensors of G protein activation expressed in separate cells. The angiotensin II-induced, paracrine activation of CB1 receptors was visualized by detecting translocation of green fluorescent protein-tagged β-arrestin2. Mass spectrometry analyses have demonstrated angiotensin II-induced stimulation of 2-arachidonoylglycerol production, whereas no increase of anandamide levels was observed. Stimulation of Gq/11-coupled M1, M3, M5 muscarinic, V1 vasopressin, α1a adrenergic, B2 bradykinin receptors, but not Gi/o-coupled M2 and M4 muscarinic receptors, also led to paracrine transactivation of CB1 receptors. These data suggest that, in addition to their retrograde neurotransmitter role, endocannabinoids have much broader paracrine mediator functions during activation of Gq/11-coupled receptors.Hormones, neurotransmitters, and other chemical mediators acting on G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs)2 exert their effects on the target cells by stimulating G protein-dependent and independent intracellular signaling pathways (14). Activation of Gq/11 protein-coupled receptors causes phospholipase C activation, which produces inositol-trisphosphate and diacylglycerol from phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate, leading to Ca2+-signal generation and protein kinase C activation. However, the concerted response of tissues to chemical mediators frequently also involves the activation of cells adjacent to the target cells, due to the release of paracrine mediators. A well known example is NO, which can be released from activated endothelial cells to cause relaxation of adjacent vascular smooth muscle cells. Lipid mediators can also act as intercellular messengers. For example, endocannabinoids released from postsynaptic neurons after depolarization act as retrograde transmitters by binding to and stimulating presynaptic cannabinoid receptors, which leads to inhibition of γ-aminobutyric acid release (an event termed depolarization-induced suppression of inhibition, DSI) (57).Cannabinoid receptors were first identified based on their ability to selectively recognize marijuana analogs. To date, two cannabinoid receptors have been identified by molecular cloning, CB1 and CB2 receptors (CB1R and CB2R, respectively) (5, 8, 9), although additional GPCRs have also been proposed to function as cannabinoid receptors (10, 11). Cannabinoid receptors also recognize certain lipids present in animal tissues termed endocannabinoids, such as arachidonylethanolamide (anandamide), 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), and 2-arachidonoylglyceryl ether (noladin ether) (7, 1216). In adult and fetal neural tissues, the two major endocannabinoids, anandamide and 2-AG, are produced on demand, usually after depolarization of postsynaptic cells or following stimulation of Gq-coupled metabotropic glutamate or muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (7, 12, 1720). Enzymes responsible for 2-AG production and metabolism in tissues are localized to well defined structures at synapses, near the axon terminals of CB1R-expressing cells (5, 7). In contrast, in peripheral tissues baseline levels of endocannabinoid production usually manifest as “endocannabinoid tone,” with poorly understood localization of the various components of the endocannabinoid system. 2-AG levels in brain homogenates and in many peripheral tissues are near its Kd for the CB1R (19), suggesting that function of endocannabinoids may not be limited to localized synaptic signaling.There is mounting evidence that endocannabinoids play important roles in peripheral cardiovascular, inflammatory, intestinal, and metabolic regulation (2124). 2-AG is produced by diacylglycerol-lipase (DAGL) after cleavage of the fatty-acid in the sn-1 position of diacylglycerol (DAG) (19, 25). Phospholipase C activation by Gq/11 protein-coupled receptors produces DAG, which can serve as a substrate for DAGL. Plasma membrane phosphoinositides are enriched in arachidonic acid in the sn-2 position (26), and DAGL is expressed ubiquitously (27), which suggests that phospholipase C-mediated cleavage of polyphosphoinositides may routinely lead to the formation of 2-AG. In accordance with this hypothesis, we have recently shown that angiotensin II- (Ang II)-mediated activation of the Gq/11-coupled AT1 angiotensin receptor (AT1R) leads to DAGL-dependent activation of CB1Rs expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells (28).Here our aim has been to examine the possibility that 2-AG serves as a common paracrine signal generated via activation of Gq/11 protein-coupled, Ca2+-mobilizing receptors. Accordingly, we co-expressed CB1Rs and BRET-based sensors of G protein activation in CHO cells, and used these cells to detect endocannabinoid release from adjacent cells that express AT1R or other Ca2+-mobilizing GPCRs. We have further shown that activation of AT1R by Ang II increases 2-AG levels in CHO cells. These findings suggest that 2-AG is commonly released following activation of Ca2+-mobilizing GPCRs and serves as a paracrine signal to activate CB1R in neighboring cells.
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