Identification and characterization of a second melanin-concentrating hormone receptor, MCH-2R


Autoria(s): Sailer, Andreas W.; Sano, Hideki; Zeng, Zhizhen; McDonald, Terrence P.; Pan, Jie; Pong, Sheng-Shung; Feighner, Scott D.; Tan, Carina P.; Fukami, Takehiro; Iwaasa, Hisashi; Hreniuk, Donna L.; Morin, Nancy R.; Sadowski, Sharon J.; Ito, Makoto; Ito, Masahiko; Bansal, Alka; Ky, Betty; Figueroa, David J.; Jiang, Qingping; Austin, Christopher P.; MacNeil, Douglas J.; Ishihara, Akane; Ihara, Masaki; Kanatani, Akio; Van der Ploeg, Lex H. T.; Howard, Andrew D.; Liu, Qingyun
Data(s)

19/06/2001

12/06/2001

Resumo

Melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) is a 19-aa cyclic neuropeptide originally isolated from chum salmon pituitaries. Besides its effects on the aggregation of melanophores in fish several lines of evidence suggest that in mammals MCH functions as a regulator of energy homeostasis. Recently, several groups reported the identification of an orphan G protein-coupled receptor as a receptor for MCH (MCH-1R). We hereby report the identification of a second human MCH receptor termed MCH-2R, which shares about 38% amino acid identity with MCH-1R. MCH-2R displayed high-affinity MCH binding, resulting in inositol phosphate turnover and release of intracellular calcium in mammalian cells. In contrast to MCH-1R, MCH-2R signaling is not sensitive to pertussis toxin and MCH-2R cannot reduce forskolin-stimulated cAMP production, suggesting an exclusive Gαq coupling of the MCH-2R in cell-based systems. Northern blot and in situ hybridization analysis of human and monkey tissue shows that expression of MCH-2R mRNA is restricted to several regions of the brain, including the arcuate nucleus and the ventral medial hypothalamus, areas implicated in regulation of body weight. In addition, the human MCH-2R gene was mapped to the long arm of chromosome 6 at band 6q16.2–16.3, a region reported to be associated with cytogenetic abnormalities of obese patients. The characterization of a second mammalian G protein-coupled receptor for MCH potentially indicates that the control of energy homeostasis in mammals by the MCH neuropeptide system may be more complex than initially anticipated.

Identificador

/pmc/articles/PMC34708/

/pubmed/11404457

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.121170598

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

The National Academy of Sciences

Direitos

Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Biological Sciences
Tipo

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