Visualising functional 5-HT3 receptors containing A and C subunits at or near the cell surface

[Display omitted] •5-HT3 receptor A and C subunits influence clinical responses to ligands.•A and C subunits with intracellular fluorescent protein inserts behave normally.•Co-transfection reveals that A and C homomers at or near cell surface.•A and C subunits associate forming AC heteromer complexe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy 2020-12, Vol.132, p.110860, Article 110860
Hauptverfasser: Abad, Isaiah P.L., Fam, Ray L., Nguyen, Dan-Thanh, Nowell, Cameron J., Trinh, Phuc N.H., Manallack, David T., Freihat, Lubna A., Chakrabarti, Jay, Jamil, Aamani, Exintaris, Betty, Yaakob, Nor S., Irving, Helen R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •5-HT3 receptor A and C subunits influence clinical responses to ligands.•A and C subunits with intracellular fluorescent protein inserts behave normally.•Co-transfection reveals that A and C homomers at or near cell surface.•A and C subunits associate forming AC heteromer complexes.•5-HT activated whole cell currents depend on both A homomers and AC heteromers. Five different subunits of the human serotonin 3 (5-hydroxytrptamine 3; 5-HT3) receptor exist and these are present in both central and peripheral systems. Different subunits alter the efficacy of 5-HT3 receptor antagonists used to treat diarrhoea predominant-irritable bowel syndrome, chemotherapy induced nausea and vomiting and depression. Cell surface arrangement of 5-HT3 receptor complexes and the contribution of C, D and E subunits to receptor function is poorly understood. Here, we examine interactions of A and C subunits using 5-HT3 receptor subunits containing fluorescent protein inserts between the 3rd and 4th transmembrane spanning region. HEK293T cells that do not normally express 5-HT3 receptor subunits, were transiently transfected with A or C or both subunits. Patch clamp experiments show that cells transfected with either fluorescent protein tagged A or A and C subunits generate whole cell currents in response to 5-HT. These findings correlate with the apparent distribution of fluorescent protein tagged A and C subunits at or near cell surfaces detected using TIRF microscopy. In co-transfected cells, the A and C subunits are associated forming AC heteromer complexes at or near the cell surface and a proportion can also form A or C homomers. In conclusion, it is likely that both A homomers and AC heteromers contribute to whole cell currents in response to 5-HT with minimal contribution from C homomers.
ISSN:0753-3322
1950-6007
DOI:10.1016/j.biopha.2020.110860