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GPCR Heteromers and their Allosteric Receptor-Receptor Interactions

Journal

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages 356-363

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/092986712803414259

Keywords

Receptor mosaic; oligomers; allosteric modulation; GPCR; receptor recognition; receptor signaling; receptor interface; receptor trafficking; receptor G protein coupling; moonlighting; triplet homologies; adenosine receptor; dopamine receptors

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [04X-715]
  2. Hjarnfonden, Torsten and Ragnar Soderberg
  3. Telethon TV3's La Marato Foundation
  4. M.M. Wallenberg Foundation
  5. Karolinska Institutets Forskningsstiftelser
  6. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [CSD2008-00005, SAF2008-01462]
  7. Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies
  8. Ministry of Science and Higher Education, Warszawa, Poland [N N401 019635]

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The concept of intramembrane receptor-receptor interactions and evidence for their existences were introduced in the beginning of the 1980's, suggesting the existence of receptor heterodimerization. The discovery of GPCR heteromers and the receptor mosaic (higher order oligomers, more than two) has been related to the parallel development and application of a variety of resonance energy transfer techniques such as bioluminescence (BRET), fluorescence (FRET) and sequential energy transfer (SRET). The assembly of interacting GPCRs, heterodimers and receptor mosaic leads to changes in the agonist recognition, signaling, and trafficking of participating receptors via allosteric mechanisms, sometimes involving the appearance of cooperativity. The receptor interface in the GPCR heteromers is beginning to be characterized and the key role of electrostatic epitope-epitope interactions for the formation of the receptor heteromers will be discussed. Furthermore, a guide-and-clasp manner of receptor-receptor interactions has been proposed where the adhesive guides may be the triplet homologies. These interactions probably represent a general molecular mechanism for receptor-receptor interactions. It is proposed that changes in GPCR function (moonlighting) may develop through the intracellular loops and C-terminii of the GPCR heteromers as a result of dynamic allosteric interactions between different types of G proteins and other receptor interacting proteins in these domains of the receptors. The evidence for the existence of receptor heteromers opens up a new field for a better understanding of neurophysiology and neuropathology. Furthermore, novel therapeutic approaches could be possible based on the use of heteromers as targets for drug development based on their unique pharmacology.

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