Functional desensitization of the isolated beta-adrenergic receptor by the beta-adrenergic receptor kinase: potential role of an analog of the retinal protein arrestin (48-kDa protein).


Autoria(s): Benovic, JL; Kühn, H; Weyand, I; Codina, J; Caron, MG; Lefkowitz, RJ
Data(s)

01/12/1987

Formato

8879 - 8882

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2827157

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 1987, 84 (24), pp. 8879 - 8882

0027-8424

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/7874

Relação

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

10.1073/pnas.84.24.8879

Tipo

Journal Article

Cobertura

United States

Resumo

The beta-adrenergic receptor kinase is an enzyme, possibly analogous to rhodopsin kinase, that multiply phosphorylates the beta-adrenergic receptor only when it is occupied by stimulatory agonists. Since this kinase may play an important role in mediating the process of homologous, or agonist-specific, desensitization, we investigated the functional consequences of receptor phosphorylation by the kinase and possible analogies with the mechanism of action of rhodopsin kinase. Pure hamster lung beta 2-adrenergic receptor, reconstituted in phospholipid vesicles, was assessed for its ability to mediate agonist-promoted stimulation of the GTPase activity of coreconstituted stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein. When the receptor was phosphorylated by partially (approximately 350-fold) purified preparations of beta-adrenergic receptor kinase, as much as 80% inactivation of its functional activity was observed. However, the use of more highly purified enzyme preparations led to a dramatic decrease in the ability of phosphorylation to inactivate the receptor such that pure enzyme preparations (approximately 20,000-fold purified) caused only minimal (approximately 1off/- 7%) inactivation. Addition of pure retinal arrestin (48-kDa protein or S antigen), which is involved in enhancing the inactivating effect of rhodopsin phosphorylation by rhodopsin kinase, led to partial restoration of the functional effect of beta-adrenergic receptor kinase-promoted phosphorylation (41 +/- 3% inactivation). These results suggest the possibility that a protein analogous to retinal arrestin may exist in other tissues and function in concert with beta-adrenergic receptor kinase to regulate the activity of adenylate cyclase-coupled receptors.

Idioma(s)

ENG

Palavras-Chave #Animals #Antigens #Arrestin #Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases #Eye Proteins #GTP-Binding Proteins #Humans #In Vitro Techniques #Phosphoproteins #Phosphorylation #Protein Kinases #Receptors, Adrenergic, beta #Retina #beta-Adrenergic Receptor Kinases