Laboratory of Signal Transduction, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, US Department of Health and Human Services, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Oct 23;109(43):17591-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1209411109. Epub 2012 Oct 8.
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) compose the largest family of cell surface receptors and are the most common target of therapeutic drugs. The nonvisual arrestins, β-arrestin-1 and β-arrestin-2, are multifunctional scaffolding proteins that play critical roles in GPCR signaling. On binding of activated GPCRs at the plasma membrane, β-arrestins terminate G protein-dependent responses (desensitization) and stimulate β-arrestin-dependent signaling pathways. Alterations in the cellular complement of β-arrestin-1 and β-arrestin-2 occur in many human diseases, and their genetic ablation in mice has severe consequences. Surprisingly, however, the factors that control β-arrestin gene expression are poorly understood. We demonstrate that glucocorticoids differentially regulate β-arrestin-1 and β-arrestin-2 gene expression in multiple cell types. Glucocorticoids act via the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) to induce the synthesis of β-arrestin-1 and repress the expression of β-arrestin-2. Glucocorticoid-dependent regulation involves the recruitment of ligand-activated glucocorticoid receptors to conserved and functional glucocorticoid response elements in intron-1 of the β-arrestin-1 gene and intron-11 of the β-arrestin-2 gene. In human lung adenocarcinoma cells, the increased expression of β-arrestin-1 after glucocorticoid treatment impairs G protein-dependent activation of inositol phosphate signaling while enhancing β-arrestin-1-dependent stimulation of the MAPK pathway by protease activated receptor 1. These studies demonstrate that glucocorticoids redirect the signaling profile of GPCRs via alterations in β-arrestin gene expression, revealing a paradigm for cross-talk between nuclear and cell surface receptors and a mechanism by which glucocorticoids alter the clinical efficacy of GPCR-based drugs.
G 蛋白偶联受体 (GPCRs) 构成了细胞表面受体的最大家族,也是治疗药物最常见的靶标。非视觉 arrestin(β-arrestin-1 和 β-arrestin-2)是多功能支架蛋白,在 GPCR 信号转导中发挥关键作用。在激活的 GPCR 与质膜结合时,β-arrestin 终止 G 蛋白依赖性反应(脱敏)并刺激β-arrestin 依赖性信号通路。许多人类疾病中 arrestin-1 和 arrestin-2 的细胞成分发生改变,其在小鼠中的遗传缺失具有严重后果。然而,令人惊讶的是,控制β-arrestin 基因表达的因素知之甚少。我们证明糖皮质激素在多种细胞类型中差异调节β-arrestin-1 和β-arrestin-2 的基因表达。糖皮质激素通过糖皮质激素受体 (GR) 发挥作用,诱导β-arrestin-1 的合成并抑制β-arrestin-2 的表达。糖皮质激素依赖性调节涉及配体激活的糖皮质激素受体募集到β-arrestin-1 基因的内含子 1 和β-arrestin-2 基因的内含子 11 中的保守和功能糖皮质激素反应元件。在人肺腺癌细胞中,糖皮质激素处理后β-arrestin-1 的表达增加会损害 G 蛋白依赖性肌醇磷酸信号的激活,同时增强蛋白酶激活受体 1 依赖β-arrestin-1 的 MAPK 通路的刺激。这些研究表明,糖皮质激素通过改变β-arrestin 基因表达来改变 GPCR 的信号谱,揭示了核受体和细胞表面受体之间相互作用的范例,以及糖皮质激素改变基于 GPCR 的药物临床疗效的机制。