Intact cell binding properties of cells expressing altered beta-adrenergic receptors
During the course of equilibrium competition binding assays with intact cells, agonists induce conversion of beta-adrenergic receptors (BARs) from a native form with high affinity for agonists to a form with a markedly lower apparent affinity. The roles of receptor internalization, receptor-Gs coupl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Molecular pharmacology 1994-02, Vol.45 (2), p.255-261 |
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Zusammenfassung: | During the course of equilibrium competition binding assays with intact cells, agonists induce conversion of beta-adrenergic
receptors (BARs) from a native form with high affinity for agonists to a form with a markedly lower apparent affinity. The
roles of receptor internalization, receptor-Gs coupling, and receptor phosphorylation in this agonist-induced conversion to
the low affinity form were investigated. Agonist and antagonist competition for [125I]iodopindolol binding to intact cells
was measured in mouse L cells expressing wild-type BARs (C+I+), mutated BARs that do not couple to Gs but do internalize (C-I+),
and mutated BARs that do not couple to Gs and do not internalize (C-I-). For C+I+ and C-I+ cells, most of the receptors exhibited
apparent affinities for the agonist isoproterenol that were 500-900-fold lower in equilibrium assays with intact cells than
in short-time assays with intact cells or in equilibrium assays with isolated membranes, similar to previous results with
cells expressing native BARs. The extent of conversion to this lower affinity form for C-I- cells was markedly decreased.
Binding properties for the antagonist metoprolol were similar for all three BARs in both short-time and equilibrium assays.
Isoproterenol competition in short-time and equilibrium assays also was compared in Chinese hamster fibroblasts expressing
wild-type BARs, mutated BARs that lack BAR kinase sites, mutated BARs that lack cAMP-dependent protein kinase sites, and mutated
BARs that lack both types of phosphorylation sites. All three BAR phosphorylation mutants showed only small but significant
decreases, relative to the wild-type BAR, in the extent of conversion to the low affinity form. These results provide additional
evidence that receptor internalization is the major determinant for the conversion of intact cell BARs to the low affinity
form. Receptor phosphorylation may play a minor role in conversion to the low affinity form, whereas receptor coupling to
Gs is apparently not required. |
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ISSN: | 0026-895X 1521-0111 |