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GPR37 Protein Trafficking to the Plasma Membrane Regulated by Prosaposin and GM1 Gangliosides Promotes Cell Viability
Authors:Ebba Gregorsson Lundius  Vladana Vukojevi?   Ellen Hertz  Nikolas Stroth  Andreas Cederlund  Masao Hiraiwa  Lars Terenius  Per Svenningsson
Affiliation:From the Laboratory of Translational Neuropharmacology and ;§Laboratory of Experimental Alcohol and Drug Addiction Research, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Center for Molecular Medicine L8:01, Karolinska University Hospital, 171 76 Stockholm, Sweden and ;Vet Therapeutics, San Diego, California 92121
Abstract:The subcellular distribution of the G protein-coupled receptor GPR37 affects cell viability and is implicated in the pathogenesis of parkinsonism. Intracellular accumulation and aggregation of GPR37 cause cell death, whereas GPR37 located in the plasma membrane provides cell protection. We define here a pathway through which the recently identified natural ligand, prosaposin, promotes plasma membrane association of GPR37. Immunoabsorption of extracellular prosaposin reduced GPR37tGFP surface density and decreased cell viability in catecholaminergic N2a cells. We found that GPR37tGFP partitioned in GM1 ganglioside-containing lipid rafts in the plasma membrane of live cells. This partitioning required extracellular prosaposin and was disrupted by lipid raft perturbation using methyl-β-cyclodextrin or cholesterol oxidase. Moreover, complex formation between GPR37tGFP and the GM1 marker cholera toxin was observed in the plasma membrane. These data show functional association between GPR37, prosaposin, and GM1 in the plasma membrane. These results thus tie together the three previously defined components of the cellular response to insult. Our findings identify a mechanism through which the receptor''s natural ligand and GM1 may protect against toxic intracellular GPR37 aggregates observed in parkinsonism.
Keywords:Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy   G Protein-coupled Receptors (GPCR)   Ganglioside   Lipid Raft   Parkinson Disease   Pael-R
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