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Caveolin interacts with the angiotensin II type 1 receptor during exocytic transport but not at the plasma membrane
Authors:Wyse Bruce D  Prior Ian A  Qian Hongwei  Morrow Isabel C  Nixon Susan  Muncke Cornelia  Kurzchalia Teymuras V  Thomas Walter G  Parton Robert G  Hancock John F
Affiliation:Department of Molecular and Cellular Pathology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Abstract:The mechanisms involved in angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1-R) trafficking and membrane localization are largely unknown. In this study, we examined the role of caveolin in these processes. Electron microscopy of plasma membrane sheets shows that the AT1-R is not concentrated in caveolae but is clustered in cholesterol-independent microdomains; upon activation, it partially redistributes to lipid rafts. Despite the lack of AT1-R in caveolae, AT1-R.caveolin complexes are readily detectable in cells co-expressing both proteins. This interaction requires an intact caveolin scaffolding domain because mutant caveolins that lack a functional caveolin scaffolding domain do not interact with AT1-R. Expression of an N-terminally truncated caveolin-3, CavDGV, that localizes to lipid bodies, or a point mutant, Cav3-P104L, that accumulates in the Golgi mislocalizes AT1-R to lipid bodies and Golgi, respectively. Mislocalization results in aberrant maturation and surface expression of AT1-R, effects that are not reversed by supplementing cells with cholesterol. Similarly mutation of aromatic residues in the caveolin-binding site abrogates AT1-R cell surface expression. In cells lacking caveolin-1 or caveolin-3, AT1-R does not traffic to the cell surface unless caveolin is ectopically expressed. This observation is recapitulated in caveolin-1 null mice that have a 55% reduction in renal AT1-R levels compared with controls. Taken together our results indicate that a direct interaction with caveolin is required to traffic the AT1-R through the exocytic pathway, but this does not result in AT1-R sequestration in caveolae. Caveolin therefore acts as a molecular chaperone rather than a plasma membrane scaffold for AT1-R.
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