Literature DB >> 17552496

Recovery of oligomers and cooperativity when monomers of the M2 muscarinic cholinergic receptor are reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles.

Amy W-S Ma1, Dar'ya S Redka, Luca F Pisterzi, Stéphane Angers, James W Wells.   

Abstract

FLAG- and HA-tagged M2 muscarinic receptors from coinfected Sf9 cells have been purified in digitonin-cholate and reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles. The purified receptor was predominantly monomeric: it showed no detectable coimmunoprecipitation; it migrated as a monomer during electrophoresis before or after cross-linking with bis(sulfosuccinimidyl)suberate; and it bound agonists and antagonists in a manner indicative of identical and mutually independent sites. Receptor cross-linked after reconstitution or after reconstitution and subsequent solubilization in digitonin-cholate migrated almost exclusively as a tetramer. The binding properties of the reconstituted receptor mimicked those reported previously for cardiac muscarinic receptors. The apparent capacity for N-[3H]methylscopolamine (NMS) was only 60% of that for [3H]quinuclidinylbenzilate (QNB), yet binding at saturating concentrations of [3H]QNB was inhibited fully and in a noncompetitive manner at comparatively low concentrations of unlabeled NMS. Reconstitution of the receptor with a saturating quantity of functional G proteins led to the appearance of three classes of sites for the agonist oxotremorine-M in assays with [3H]QNB; GMP-PNP caused an apparent interconversion from highest to lowest affinity and the concomitant emergence of a fourth class of intermediate affinity. All of the data can be described quantitatively in terms of cooperativity among four interacting sites, presumably within a tetramer; the effect of GMP-PNP can be accommodated as a shift in the distribution of tetramers between two states that differ in their cooperative properties. Monomers of the M2 receptor therefore can be assembled into tetramers with binding properties that closely resemble those of the muscarinic receptor in myocardial preparations.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17552496     DOI: 10.1021/bi6026105

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochemistry        ISSN: 0006-2960            Impact factor:   3.162


  18 in total

1.  Oligomeric size of the m2 muscarinic receptor in live cells as determined by quantitative fluorescence resonance energy transfer.

Authors:  Luca F Pisterzi; David B Jansma; John Georgiou; Michael J Woodside; Judy Tai-Chieh Chou; Stéphane Angers; Valerica Raicu; James W Wells
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2010-03-19       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 2.  Modelling the interdependence between the stoichiometry of receptor oligomerization and ligand binding for a coexisting dimer/tetramer receptor system.

Authors:  X Rovira; M Vivó; J Serra; D Roche; P G Strange; J Giraldo
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 8.739

3.  A division of labor: asymmetric roles for GPCR subunits in receptor dimers.

Authors:  Peter Zylbergold; Terence E Hébert
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2009-09       Impact factor: 15.040

4.  Formation and dissociation of M1 muscarinic receptor dimers seen by total internal reflection fluorescence imaging of single molecules.

Authors:  Jonathan A Hern; Asma H Baig; Gregory I Mashanov; Berry Birdsall; John E T Corrie; Sebastian Lazareno; Justin E Molloy; Nigel J M Birdsall
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-01-20       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Molecular Insights into Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor Allosteric Modulation.

Authors:  Karen J Gregory; P Jeffrey Conn
Journal:  Mol Pharmacol       Date:  2015-03-25       Impact factor: 4.436

6.  Ligand-Induced Coupling between Oligomers of the M2 Receptor and the Gi1 Protein in Live Cells.

Authors:  Yuchong Li; Rabindra V Shivnaraine; Fei Huang; James W Wells; Claudiu C Gradinaru
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2018-08-08       Impact factor: 4.033

Review 7.  The prevalence, maintenance, and relevance of G protein-coupled receptor oligomerization.

Authors:  Graeme Milligan
Journal:  Mol Pharmacol       Date:  2013-04-30       Impact factor: 4.436

8.  Ligand regulation of the quaternary organization of cell surface M3 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors analyzed by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) imaging and homogeneous time-resolved FRET.

Authors:  Elisa Alvarez-Curto; Richard J Ward; John D Pediani; Graeme Milligan
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2010-05-19       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Scalable rule-based modelling of allosteric proteins and biochemical networks.

Authors:  Julien F Ollivier; Vahid Shahrezaei; Peter S Swain
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2010-11-04       Impact factor: 4.475

10.  Ligand-regulated oligomerization of beta(2)-adrenoceptors in a model lipid bilayer.

Authors:  Juan José Fung; Xavier Deupi; Leonardo Pardo; Xiao Jie Yao; Gisselle A Velez-Ruiz; Brian T Devree; Roger K Sunahara; Brian K Kobilka
Journal:  EMBO J       Date:  2009-09-17       Impact factor: 11.598

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