Cholesterol-dependent separation of the beta2-adrenergic receptor from its partners determines signaling efficacy: insight into nanoscale organization of signal transduction |
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Authors: | Pontier Stéphanie M Percherancier Yann Galandrin Ségolène Breit Andreas Galés Céline Bouvier Michel |
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Institution: | Institut de Recherche en Immunologie et Cancérologie, Département de Biochimie, and Groupe de Recherche Universitaire sur le Médicament, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec H3C 3J7, Canada. |
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Abstract: | Determining the role of lipid raft nanodomains in G protein-coupled receptor signaling remains fraught by the lack of assays directly monitoring rafts in native membranes. We thus combined extensive biochemical and pharmacological approaches to a nanoscale strategy based on bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) to assess the spatial and functional influence of cholesterol-rich liquid-ordered lipid nanodomains on beta(2) adrenergic receptor (beta(2)AR) signaling. The data revealed that whereas beta(2)AR did not partition within liquid-ordered lipid phase, a pool of G protein and adenylyl cyclase (AC) were sequestered in these domains. Destabilization of the liquid-ordered phase by cholesterol depletion led to a lateral redistribution of Galpha(s) and AC that favored interactions between the receptor and its signaling partners as assessed by BRET. This resulted in an increased basal and agonist-promoted beta(2)AR-stimulated cAMP production that was partially dampened as a result of constitutive protein kinase A-dependent phosphorylation and desensitization of the receptor. This restraining influence of nanodomains on beta(2)AR signaling was further substantiated by showing that liquid-ordered lipid phase stabilization using caveolin overexpression or increasing membrane cholesterol amount led to an inhibition of beta(2)AR-associated signaling. Given the emerging concept that clustering of receptors and effectors into signaling platforms contributes to the efficacy and selectivity of signal transduction, our results support a model whereby cholesterol-promoted liquid-ordered lipid phase-embedding G(s) and AC allows their lateral separation from the receptor, thus restraining the basal activity and controlling responsiveness of beta(2)AR signaling machinery within larger signaling platforms. |
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