Post-translational Proteolytic Processing of the Calcium-independent Receptor of [alpha]-Latrotoxin (CIRL), a Natural Chimera of the Cell Adhesion Protein and the G Protein-coupled Receptor. ROLE OF THE G PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTOR PROTEOLYSIS SITE (GPS) MOTIF

The calcium-independent receptor of [alpha]-latrotoxin (CIRL), a neuronal cell surface receptor implicated in the regulation of exocytosis, is a natural chimera of the cell adhesion protein and the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). In contrast with canonic GPCRs, CIRL consists of two heterologous n...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2002-11, Vol.277 (48), p.46518-46526
Hauptverfasser: Krasnoperov, V, Lu, Y, Buryanovsky, L, Neubert, T A, Ichtchenko, K, Petrenko, A G
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The calcium-independent receptor of [alpha]-latrotoxin (CIRL), a neuronal cell surface receptor implicated in the regulation of exocytosis, is a natural chimera of the cell adhesion protein and the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). In contrast with canonic GPCRs, CIRL consists of two heterologous non-covalently bound subunits, p120 and p85, due to endogenous proteolytic processing of the receptor precursor in the endoplasmic reticulum. Extracellularly oriented p120 contains hydrophilic cell adhesion domains, whereas p85 resembles a generic GPCR. We determined that the site of the CIRL cleavage is located within a juxtamembrane Cys- and Trp-rich domain of the N-terminal extracellular region of CIRL. Mutations in this domain make CIRL resistant to the cleavage and impair its trafficking. Therefore, we have named it GPS for G protein-coupled receptor proteolysis site. The GPS motif is found in homologous adhesion GPCRs and thus defines a novel receptor family. We postulate that the proteolytic processing and two-subunit structure is a common characteristic feature in the family of GPS-containing adhesion GPCRs.
ISSN:0021-9258