4.4 Article

Endocytosis of the viral chemokine receptor US28 does not require beta-arrestins but is dependent on the clathrin-mediated pathway

Journal

TRAFFIC
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages 243-253

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0854.2003.00079.x

Keywords

beta-arrestin; chemokine receptor; endocytosis; HCMV; siRNA; US28

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Arrestins bind phosphorylated G-protein coupled-receptors (GPCR) and inhibit agonist-induced signal transduction by uncoupling the receptors from their cognate G-proteins. beta-arrestins also act as adaptors that target GPCR to endocytic clathrin-coated vesicles. Unlike cellular GPCRs, the human cytomegalovirus GPCRs and chemokine receptor, US28, shows constitutive signal transduction activity and undergoes constitutive endocytosis. To determine the role of beta-arrestins in US28 trafficking, we used embryonic fibroblasts derived from beta-arrestin knockout mice. In these cells, the internalization of transfected beta2-adrenergic receptor and of the cellular chemokine receptor CCR5 was impaired. By contrast, US28 distribution was unaffected, and US28-mediated RANTES internalization was similar in normal and knockout cell lines. To investigate whether a clathrin-mediated pathway is involved in US28 endocytosis, we developed small interfering RNA against the mu2-adaptin subunit of the AP-2 adaptor complex. In cells transfected with mu2 small interfering RNA transferrin endocytosis was severely inhibited. Antibody-feeding experiments and biochemical analysis showed that US28 internalization was also inhibited. Together, these data indicate that US28 endocytosis occurs via a clathrin-mediated mechanism but is independent of beta-arrestins .

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