Cargando…

Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor

Oxytocin receptor (OTR) is a membrane protein known to mediate oxytocin (OT) effects, in both normal and neoplastic cells. We report here that human osteosarcoma (U2OS, MG63, OS15 and SaOS2), breast cancer (MCF7), and primary human fibroblastic cells (HFF) all exhibit OTR not only on the cell membra...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kinsey, Conan G, Bussolati, Gianni, Bosco, Martino, Kimura, Tadashi, Pizzorno, Marie C, Chernin, Mitchell I, Cassoni, Paola, Novak, Josef F
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4401223/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17367504
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2007.00015.x
_version_ 1782367113520873472
author Kinsey, Conan G
Bussolati, Gianni
Bosco, Martino
Kimura, Tadashi
Pizzorno, Marie C
Chernin, Mitchell I
Cassoni, Paola
Novak, Josef F
author_facet Kinsey, Conan G
Bussolati, Gianni
Bosco, Martino
Kimura, Tadashi
Pizzorno, Marie C
Chernin, Mitchell I
Cassoni, Paola
Novak, Josef F
author_sort Kinsey, Conan G
collection PubMed
description Oxytocin receptor (OTR) is a membrane protein known to mediate oxytocin (OT) effects, in both normal and neoplastic cells. We report here that human osteosarcoma (U2OS, MG63, OS15 and SaOS2), breast cancer (MCF7), and primary human fibroblastic cells (HFF) all exhibit OTR not only on the cell membrane, but also in the various nuclear compartments including the nucleolus. Both an OTR-GFP fusion protein and the native OTR appear to be localized to the nucleus as detected by transfection and/or confocal immunofluorescence, respectively. Treatment with oxytocin causes internalization of OTR and the resulting vesicles accumulate in the vicinity of the nucleus and some of the perinuclear OTR enters the nucleus. Western blots indicate that OTR in the nucleus and on the plasma membrane are likely to be the same biochemical and immunological entities. It appears that OTR is first visible in the nucleoli and subsequently disperses within the nucleus into 4–20 spots while some of the OTR diffuses throughout the nucleoplasm.The behaviour and kinetics of OTR-GFP and OTR are different, indicating interference by GFP in both OTR entrance into the nucleus and subsequent relocalization of OTR within the nucleus. There are important differences among the tested cells, such as the requirement of a ligand for transfer of OTR in nuclei. A constitutive internalization of OTR was found only in osteosarcoma cells, while the nuclear localization in all other tested cells was dependent on ligand binding. The amount of OTR-positive material within and in the vicinity of the nucleus increased following a treatment with oxytocin in both constitutive and ligand-dependent type of cells. The evidence of OTR compartmentalization at the cell nucleus (either ligand-dependent or constitutive) in different cell types suggests still unknown biological functions of this protein or its ligand and adds this G-protein-coupled receptor to other heptahelical receptors displaying this atypical and unexpected nuclear localization.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4401223
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2007
publisher Blackwell Publishing Ltd
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-44012232015-04-27 Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor Kinsey, Conan G Bussolati, Gianni Bosco, Martino Kimura, Tadashi Pizzorno, Marie C Chernin, Mitchell I Cassoni, Paola Novak, Josef F J Cell Mol Med In Focus Oxytocin receptor (OTR) is a membrane protein known to mediate oxytocin (OT) effects, in both normal and neoplastic cells. We report here that human osteosarcoma (U2OS, MG63, OS15 and SaOS2), breast cancer (MCF7), and primary human fibroblastic cells (HFF) all exhibit OTR not only on the cell membrane, but also in the various nuclear compartments including the nucleolus. Both an OTR-GFP fusion protein and the native OTR appear to be localized to the nucleus as detected by transfection and/or confocal immunofluorescence, respectively. Treatment with oxytocin causes internalization of OTR and the resulting vesicles accumulate in the vicinity of the nucleus and some of the perinuclear OTR enters the nucleus. Western blots indicate that OTR in the nucleus and on the plasma membrane are likely to be the same biochemical and immunological entities. It appears that OTR is first visible in the nucleoli and subsequently disperses within the nucleus into 4–20 spots while some of the OTR diffuses throughout the nucleoplasm.The behaviour and kinetics of OTR-GFP and OTR are different, indicating interference by GFP in both OTR entrance into the nucleus and subsequent relocalization of OTR within the nucleus. There are important differences among the tested cells, such as the requirement of a ligand for transfer of OTR in nuclei. A constitutive internalization of OTR was found only in osteosarcoma cells, while the nuclear localization in all other tested cells was dependent on ligand binding. The amount of OTR-positive material within and in the vicinity of the nucleus increased following a treatment with oxytocin in both constitutive and ligand-dependent type of cells. The evidence of OTR compartmentalization at the cell nucleus (either ligand-dependent or constitutive) in different cell types suggests still unknown biological functions of this protein or its ligand and adds this G-protein-coupled receptor to other heptahelical receptors displaying this atypical and unexpected nuclear localization. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2007-01 2007-03-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4401223/ /pubmed/17367504 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2007.00015.x Text en
spellingShingle In Focus
Kinsey, Conan G
Bussolati, Gianni
Bosco, Martino
Kimura, Tadashi
Pizzorno, Marie C
Chernin, Mitchell I
Cassoni, Paola
Novak, Josef F
Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
title Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
title_full Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
title_fullStr Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
title_full_unstemmed Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
title_short Constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
title_sort constitutive and ligand-induced nuclear localization of oxytocin receptor
topic In Focus
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4401223/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17367504
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1582-4934.2007.00015.x
work_keys_str_mv AT kinseyconang constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT bussolatigianni constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT boscomartino constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT kimuratadashi constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT pizzornomariec constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT cherninmitchelli constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT cassonipaola constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor
AT novakjoseff constitutiveandligandinducednuclearlocalizationofoxytocinreceptor