Sato M, Kataoka R, Dingus J, Wilcox M, Hildebrandt J D, Lanier S M
Department of Pharmacology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston 29425, USA.
J Biol Chem. 1995 Jun 23;270(25):15269-76. doi: 10.1074/jbc.270.25.15269.
Among subfamilies of G-protein-coupled receptors, agonists initiate several cell signaling events depending on the receptor subtype (R) and the type of G-protein (G) or effector molecule (E) expressed in a particular cell. Determinants of signaling specificity/efficiency may operate at the R-G interface, where events are influenced by cell architecture or accessory proteins found in the receptor's microenvironment. This issue was addressed by characterizing signal transfer from R to G following stable expression of the alpha 2A/D adrenergic receptor in two different membrane environments (NIH-3T3 fibroblasts and the pheochromocytoma cell line, PC-12). Receptor coupling to endogenous G-proteins in both cell types was eliminated by pertussis toxin pretreatment and R-G signal transfer restored by reconstitution of cell membranes with purified brain G-protein. Thus, the receptor has access to the same population of G-proteins in the two different environments. In this signal restoration assay, agonist-induced activation of G was 3-9-fold greater in PC-12 as compared with NIH-3T3 alpha 2-adrenergic receptor transfectants. The cell-specific differences in signal transfer were observed over a range of receptor densities or G-protein concentration. The augmented signal transfer in PC-12 versus NIH-3T3 transfectants occurred despite a 2-3-fold lower level of receptors existing in the R-G-coupled state (high affinity, guanyl-5'-yl imidodiphosphate-sensitive agonist binding), suggesting the existence of other membrane factors that influence the nucleotide binding behavior of G-protein in the two cell types. Detergent extraction of PC-12 but not NIH-3T3 membranes yielded a heat-sensitive, macromolecular entity that increased 35S-labeled guanosine 5'-O-(thiotriphosphate) binding to brain G-protein in a concentration-dependent manner. These data indicate that the transfer of signal from R to G is regulated by a cell type-specific, membrane-associated protein that enhances the agonist-induced activation of G.
在G蛋白偶联受体的亚家族中,激动剂会根据受体亚型(R)以及特定细胞中表达的G蛋白(G)或效应分子(E)的类型引发多种细胞信号传导事件。信号特异性/效率的决定因素可能在R-G界面起作用,在该界面处,事件会受到细胞结构或受体微环境中发现的辅助蛋白的影响。通过在两种不同的膜环境(NIH-3T3成纤维细胞和嗜铬细胞瘤细胞系PC-12)中稳定表达α2A/D肾上腺素能受体后,表征从R到G的信号传递,解决了这个问题。通过百日咳毒素预处理消除了两种细胞类型中受体与内源性G蛋白的偶联,并通过用纯化的脑G蛋白重建细胞膜来恢复R-G信号传递。因此,受体在两种不同环境中可接触到相同群体的G蛋白。在这个信号恢复试验中,与NIH-3T3α2-肾上腺素能受体转染子相比,激动剂诱导的PC-12中G的激活要高3至9倍。在一系列受体密度或G蛋白浓度范围内都观察到了信号传递的细胞特异性差异。尽管处于R-G偶联状态(高亲和力、对鸟苷-5'-基咪唑二磷酸敏感的激动剂结合)的受体水平低2至3倍,但PC-12转染子与NIH-3T3转染子相比,信号传递仍增强,这表明存在其他膜因子会影响两种细胞类型中G蛋白的核苷酸结合行为。用去污剂提取PC-12而非NIH-3T3膜会产生一种热敏感的大分子实体,该实体以浓度依赖的方式增加了35S标记的鸟苷5'-O-(硫代三磷酸)与脑G蛋白的结合。这些数据表明,从R到G的信号传递受一种细胞类型特异性的膜相关蛋白调节,该蛋白可增强激动剂诱导的G激活。