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Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT

The A(2A)-adenosine receptor undergoes restricted collision coupling with its cognate G protein G(s) and lacks a palmitoylation site at the end of helix 8 in its intracellular C terminus. We explored the hypothesis that there was a causal link between the absence of a palmitoyl moiety and restricted...

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Autores principales: Keuerleber, Simon, Thurner, Patrick, Gruber, Christian W., Zezula, Jürgen, Freissmuth, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3516756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23071116
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.393579
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author Keuerleber, Simon
Thurner, Patrick
Gruber, Christian W.
Zezula, Jürgen
Freissmuth, Michael
author_facet Keuerleber, Simon
Thurner, Patrick
Gruber, Christian W.
Zezula, Jürgen
Freissmuth, Michael
author_sort Keuerleber, Simon
collection PubMed
description The A(2A)-adenosine receptor undergoes restricted collision coupling with its cognate G protein G(s) and lacks a palmitoylation site at the end of helix 8 in its intracellular C terminus. We explored the hypothesis that there was a causal link between the absence of a palmitoyl moiety and restricted collision coupling by introducing a palmitoylation site. The resulting mutant A(2A)-R309C receptor underwent palmitoylation as verified by both mass spectrometry and metabolic labeling. In contrast to the wild type A(2A) receptor, the concentration-response curve for agonist-induced cAMP accumulation was shifted to the left with increasing expression levels of A(2A)-R309C receptor, an observation consistent with collision coupling. Single particle tracking of quantum dot-labeled receptors confirmed that wild type and mutant A(2A) receptor differed in diffusivity and diffusion mode; agonist activation resulted in a decline in mean square displacement of both receptors, but the drop was substantially more pronounced for the wild type receptor. In addition, in the agonist-bound state, the wild type receptor was frequently subject to confinement events (estimated radius 110 nm). These were rarely seen with the palmitoylated A(2A)-R309C receptor, the preferred diffusion mode of which was a random walk in both the basal and the agonist-activated state. Taken together, the observations link restricted collision coupling to diffusion limits imposed by the absence of a palmitoyl moiety in the C terminus of the A(2A) receptor. The experiments allowed for visualizing local confinement of an agonist-activated G protein-coupled receptor in an area consistent with the dimensions of a lipid raft.
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spelling pubmed-35167562012-12-07 Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT Keuerleber, Simon Thurner, Patrick Gruber, Christian W. Zezula, Jürgen Freissmuth, Michael J Biol Chem Signal Transduction The A(2A)-adenosine receptor undergoes restricted collision coupling with its cognate G protein G(s) and lacks a palmitoylation site at the end of helix 8 in its intracellular C terminus. We explored the hypothesis that there was a causal link between the absence of a palmitoyl moiety and restricted collision coupling by introducing a palmitoylation site. The resulting mutant A(2A)-R309C receptor underwent palmitoylation as verified by both mass spectrometry and metabolic labeling. In contrast to the wild type A(2A) receptor, the concentration-response curve for agonist-induced cAMP accumulation was shifted to the left with increasing expression levels of A(2A)-R309C receptor, an observation consistent with collision coupling. Single particle tracking of quantum dot-labeled receptors confirmed that wild type and mutant A(2A) receptor differed in diffusivity and diffusion mode; agonist activation resulted in a decline in mean square displacement of both receptors, but the drop was substantially more pronounced for the wild type receptor. In addition, in the agonist-bound state, the wild type receptor was frequently subject to confinement events (estimated radius 110 nm). These were rarely seen with the palmitoylated A(2A)-R309C receptor, the preferred diffusion mode of which was a random walk in both the basal and the agonist-activated state. Taken together, the observations link restricted collision coupling to diffusion limits imposed by the absence of a palmitoyl moiety in the C terminus of the A(2A) receptor. The experiments allowed for visualizing local confinement of an agonist-activated G protein-coupled receptor in an area consistent with the dimensions of a lipid raft. American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2012-12-07 2012-10-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3516756/ /pubmed/23071116 http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.393579 Text en © 2012 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Author's Choice—Final version full access. Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) applies to Author Choice Articles
spellingShingle Signal Transduction
Keuerleber, Simon
Thurner, Patrick
Gruber, Christian W.
Zezula, Jürgen
Freissmuth, Michael
Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT
title Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT
title_full Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT
title_fullStr Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT
title_full_unstemmed Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT
title_short Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A(2A)-adenosine Receptor: PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT
title_sort reengineering the collision coupling and diffusion mode of the a(2a)-adenosine receptor: palmitoylation in helix 8 relieves confinement
topic Signal Transduction
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3516756/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23071116
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.393579
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