4.8 Article

Conformational biosensors reveal GPCR signalling from endosomes

期刊

NATURE
卷 495, 期 7442, 页码 534-+

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature12000

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资金

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse of the US National Institutes of Health [DA010711, DA012864, F32 DA029993]
  2. American Heart Association
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM083118, T32 GM007767]
  4. Lundbeck Foundation
  5. FWO-Vlaanderen grants [FWO551, FWO646]
  6. Innoviris-Brussels [BRGEOZ132]
  7. Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering
  8. Lundbeck Foundation [R37-2009-3457] Funding Source: researchfish

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A long-held tenet of molecular pharmacology is that canonical signal transduction mediated by G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) coupling to heterotrimeric G proteins is confined to the plasma membrane. Evidence supporting this traditional view is based on analytical methods that provide limited or no subcellular resolution(1). It has been subsequently proposed that signalling by internalized GPCRs is restricted to G-protein-independent mechanisms such as scaffolding by arrestins(2,3), or GPCR activation elicits a discrete formof persistent G protein signalling(4-9), or that internalized GPCRs can indeed contribute to the acute G-protein-mediated response(10). Evidence supporting these various latter hypotheses is indirect or subject to alternative interpretation, and it remains unknown if endosome-localized GPCRs are even present in an active form. Here we describe the application of conformation-specific single-domain antibodies (nanobodies) to directly probe activation of the beta(2)-adrenoceptor, a prototypical GPCR(11), and its cognate G protein, G(s) (ref. 12), in living mammalian cells. We show that the adrenergic agonist isoprenaline promotes receptor and G protein activation in the plasma membrane as expected, but also in the early endosome membrane, and that internalized receptors contribute to the overall cellular cyclic AMP response within several minutes after agonist application. These findings provide direct support for the hypothesis that canonical GPCR signalling occurs from endosomes as well as the plasma membrane, and suggest a versatile strategy for probing dynamic conformational change in vivo.

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