Jean-Charles Pierre-Yves, Rajiv Vishwaesh, Shenoy Sudha K
Department of Medicine (Cardiology), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Department of Cell Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
J Cell Physiol. 2016 Oct;231(10):2071-80. doi: 10.1002/jcp.25317. Epub 2016 Feb 3.
The non-visual arrestins, β-arrestin1, and β-arrestin2 were originally identified as proteins that bind to seven-transmembrane receptors (7TMRs, also called G protein-coupled receptors, GPCRs) and block heterotrimeric G protein activation, thus leading to desensitization of transmembrane signaling. However, as subsequent discoveries have continually demonstrated, their functionality is not constrained to desensitization. They are now recognized for their critical roles in mediating intracellular trafficking of 7TMRs, growth factor receptors, ion transporters, ion channels, nuclear receptors, and non-receptor proteins. Additionally, they function as crucial mediators of ubiquitination of 7TMRs as well as other receptors and non-receptor proteins. Recently, emerging studies suggest that a class of proteins with predicted structural features of β-arrestins regulate substrate ubiquitination in yeast and higher mammals, lending support to the idea that the adaptor role of β-arrestins in protein ubiquitination is evolutionarily conserved. β-arrestins also function as scaffolds for kinases and transduce signals from 7TMRs through pathways that do not require G protein activation. Remarkably, the endocytic and scaffolding functions of β-arrestin are intertwined with its ubiquitination status; the dynamic and site specific ubiquitination on β-arrestin plays a critical role in stabilizing β-arrestin-7TMR association and the formation of signalosomes. This review summarizes the current findings on ubiquitin-dependent regulation of 7TMRs as well as β-arrestins and the potential role of reversible ubiquitination as a "biological switch" in signal transduction. J. Cell. Physiol. 231: 2071-2080, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
非视觉抑制蛋白β-抑制蛋白1和β-抑制蛋白2最初被鉴定为与七跨膜受体(7TMR,也称为G蛋白偶联受体,GPCR)结合并阻断异源三聚体G蛋白激活的蛋白质,从而导致跨膜信号脱敏。然而,随着后续发现不断证明,它们的功能并不局限于脱敏。现在人们认识到它们在介导7TMR、生长因子受体、离子转运体、离子通道、核受体和非受体蛋白的细胞内运输中起关键作用。此外,它们还作为7TMR以及其他受体和非受体蛋白泛素化的关键介质。最近,新出现的研究表明,一类具有预测的β-抑制蛋白结构特征的蛋白质在酵母和高等哺乳动物中调节底物泛素化,这支持了β-抑制蛋白在蛋白质泛素化中的衔接子作用在进化上保守的观点。β-抑制蛋白还作为激酶的支架,并通过不需要G蛋白激活的途径转导来自7TMR的信号。值得注意的是,β-抑制蛋白的内吞和支架功能与其泛素化状态相互交织;β-抑制蛋白上的动态和位点特异性泛素化在稳定β-抑制蛋白-7TMR结合和信号小体形成中起关键作用。本综述总结了目前关于7TMR以及β-抑制蛋白的泛素依赖性调节的研究结果,以及可逆泛素化作为信号转导中的“生物开关”的潜在作用。《细胞生理学杂志》231: 2071 - 2080, 2016。© 2016威利期刊公司。