| Literature DB >> 22654874 |
Jae Min Lee1, J Joe Hull, Takeshi Kawai, Kazuhide Tsuneizumi, Masaaki Kurihara, Masaru Tanokura, Koji Nagata, Hiromichi Nagasawa, Shogo Matsumoto.
Abstract
To facilitate further evaluation of pheromone biosynthesis activating neuropeptide receptor (PBANR) functionality and regulation, we generated cultured insect cell lines constitutively expressing green fluorescent protein chimeras of the recently identified Bombyx mori PBANR (BommoPBANR) and Pseudaletia separata PBANR (PsesePBANR) variants. Fluorescent chimeras included the BommoPBANR-A, -B, and -C variants and the PsesePBANR-B and -C variants. Cell lines expressing non-chimeric BommoPBANR-B and -C variants were also generated. Functional evaluation of these transformed cell lines using confocal laser microscopy revealed that a Rhodamine Red-labeled PBAN derivative (RR-C10PBAN(R2K)) specifically co-localized with all of the respective PBANR variants at the plasma membrane. Near complete internalization of the fluorescent RR-C10PBAN(R2K) ligand 30 min after binding was observed in all cell lines except those expressing the BommoPBANR-A variant, in which the ligand/receptor complex remained at the plasma membrane. Fluorescent Ca(2+) imaging further showed that the BommoPBANR-A cell line exhibited drastically different Ca(2+) mobilization kinetics at a number of RR-C10PBAN(R2K) concentrations including 10 μM. These observations demonstrate a clear functional difference between the BommoPBANR-A variant and the BommoPBANR-B and -C variants in terms of receptor regulation and activation of downstream effector molecules. We also found that, contrary to previous reports, ligand-induced internalization of BommoPBANR-B and BommoPBANR-C in cell lines stably expressing these variants occurred in the absence of extracellular Ca(2+).Entities:
Keywords: GPCR; PBAN receptor; ligand-induced internalization; splice variants; stable transformation
Year: 2012 PMID: 22654874 PMCID: PMC3356112 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2012.00056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Constitutive expression and genomic integration of PBANR variants in cultured Sf9 cells. (A) Stable cell lines expressing the following: (a) BommoPBANR-A-EGFP, (b) BommoPBANR-B–EGFP, (c) BommoPBANR-C–EGFP, (d) PsesePBANR-B–EGFP, and (e) PsesePBANR-C–EGFP. Sf9 cells transiently expressing EGFP (f). (B) Southern blot analysis using a full-length EGFP cDNA fragment as a probe. Genomic DNAs from stably transformed and non-transformed Sf9 cell lines were digested with BamHI (single site in the pIB/V5-His-TOPO expression vector). One to four bands are detected in the (a) BommoPBANR-A–EGFP, (b) BommoPBANR-B–EGFP, (c) BommoPBANR-C–EGFFP, (d) PsesePBANR-B–EGFP and (e) PsesePBANR-C–EGFP cell lines. No band is seen in the parental Sf9 cell. The positions of DIG labeled DNA size markers are indicated on the left.
Figure 2Ligand-induced influx of extracellular Ca. (A). RR-C10PBANR2K (50 nM) induced influx of extracellular Ca2+ in Sf9 cell lines stably transformed with BommoPBANR–EGFP fluorescent chimeras. Cells were incubated in insect Ringer’s buffer (RB) or Ca2+-free RB buffer supplemented with 3 mM EGTA [EGTA(+)]. Cells were imaged before and after (2 and 30 min) addition of RR-C10PBANR2K solution. (B). The fluorescence intensity profile of BommoPBANR–EGFP Sf9 cell lines calculated as F/Fo (i.e., fluorescence prior to ligand application and 2 min after ligand application) in response to RR-C10PBANR2K (50 nM). Bars represent mean values + SEM from independent cells (n = > 8). (C). Confocal imaging of BommoPBANR-A–EGFP cells incubated with RR-C10PBANR2K (50 nM) in the presence and absence of extracellular Ca2+. Co-localization is indicated by yellow in the merged images. (D). Dose–response profile of BommoPBANR cell lines to increasing concentrations (1 nM–10 μM) of C10PBANR2K. Fluorescence intensity was measured on a FV1000D confocal laser scanning microscope using Fura Red as the Ca2+ indicator. The fluorescence intensity is presented relative to BommoPBANR-C–EGFP activation with 100 nM C10PBANR2K. Bars represent mean values + SEM of five replicates per peptide concentration. Different letters denote a statistically significant difference for each sample (one-way ANOVA, p < 0.001).
Figure 3Dynamics of EGFP-tagged PBANR variants stably expressed in Sf9 cells following binding with RR-C10PBAN. (A) Confocal imaging immediately after application of 50 nM RR-C10PBANR2K. (B) Confocal imaging 30 min after application of 50 nM RR-C10PBANR2K. For control purposes, Sf9 cells were transfected with an expression plasmid containing EGFP. Co-localization is indicated by yellow in the merged images.
Figure 4Confocal imaging of Sf9 cell lines stably transformed with non-chimeric BommoPBANR-B and BommoPBANR-C. (A) Dynamics of non-chimeric PBANR variants stably expressed in Sf9 cells upon RR-C10PBANR2K. (B) Influx of extracellular Ca2+ upon RR-C10PBANR2K binding to the intact PBANR variants stably expressed in Sf9 cells. Both receptor internalization and the influx of extracellular Ca2+ were triggered with 50 nM RR-C10PBANR2K.