Teng Michelle S, Dekkers Martijn P J, Ng Bee Ling, Rademakers Suzanne, Jansen Gert, Fraser Andrew G, McCafferty John
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton, Cambridgeshire, UK.
BMC Biol. 2006 Jul 20;4:22. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-4-22.
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) play a crucial role in many biological processes and represent a major class of drug targets. However, purification of GPCRs for biochemical study is difficult and current methods of studying receptor-ligand interactions involve in vitro systems. Caenorhabditis elegans is a soil-dwelling, bacteria-feeding nematode that uses GPCRs expressed in chemosensory neurons to detect bacteria and environmental compounds, making this an ideal system for studying in vivo GPCR-ligand interactions. We sought to test this by functionally expressing two medically important mammalian GPCRs, somatostatin receptor 2 (Sstr2) and chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) in the gustatory neurons of C. elegans.
Expression of Sstr2 and CCR5 in gustatory neurons allow C. elegans to specifically detect and respond to somatostatin and MIP-1alpha respectively in a robust avoidance assay. We demonstrate that mammalian heterologous GPCRs can signal via different endogenous Galpha subunits in C. elegans, depending on which cells it is expressed in. Furthermore, pre-exposure of GPCR transgenic animals to its ligand leads to receptor desensitisation and behavioural adaptation to subsequent ligand exposure, providing further evidence of integration of the mammalian GPCRs into the C. elegans sensory signalling machinery. In structure-function studies using a panel of somatostatin-14 analogues, we identified key residues involved in the interaction of somatostatin-14 with Sstr2.
Our results illustrate a remarkable evolutionary plasticity in interactions between mammalian GPCRs and C. elegans signalling machinery, spanning 800 million years of evolution. This in vivo system, which imparts novel avoidance behaviour on C. elegans, thus provides a simple means of studying and screening interaction of GPCRs with extracellular agonists, antagonists and intracellular binding partners.
G蛋白偶联受体(GPCRs)在许多生物学过程中发挥着关键作用,是一类主要的药物靶点。然而,用于生化研究的GPCRs纯化困难,目前研究受体-配体相互作用的方法涉及体外系统。秀丽隐杆线虫是一种以细菌为食的土壤线虫,它利用化学感受神经元中表达的GPCRs来检测细菌和环境化合物,使其成为研究体内GPCR-配体相互作用的理想系统。我们试图通过在秀丽隐杆线虫的味觉神经元中功能性表达两种医学上重要的哺乳动物GPCRs,即生长抑素受体2(Sstr2)和趋化因子受体5(CCR5)来验证这一点。
在味觉神经元中表达Sstr2和CCR5使秀丽隐杆线虫能够在强大的回避试验中分别特异性地检测生长抑素和MIP-1α并做出反应。我们证明,哺乳动物异源GPCRs在秀丽隐杆线虫中可以通过不同的内源性Gα亚基发出信号,这取决于它在哪些细胞中表达。此外,将GPCR转基因动物预先暴露于其配体可导致受体脱敏以及对后续配体暴露的行为适应,这进一步证明了哺乳动物GPCRs已整合到秀丽隐杆线虫的感觉信号传导机制中。在使用一组生长抑素-14类似物进行的结构-功能研究中,我们确定了生长抑素-14与Sstr2相互作用中涉及的关键残基。
我们的结果说明了哺乳动物GPCRs与秀丽隐杆线虫信号传导机制之间相互作用具有显著的进化可塑性,这一进化历程跨越了8亿年。这个体内系统赋予了秀丽隐杆线虫新的回避行为,从而提供了一种研究和筛选GPCRs与细胞外激动剂、拮抗剂及细胞内结合伴侣相互作用的简单方法。