| Literature DB >> 22938630 |
Abstract
Alternative splicing of G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) genes greatly increases the total number of receptor isoforms which may be expressed in a cell-dependent and time-dependent manner. This increased diversity of cell signaling options caused by the generation of splice variants is further enhanced by receptor dimerization. When alternative splicing generates highly truncated GPCRs with less than seven transmembrane (TM) domains, the predominant effect in vitro is that of a dominant-negative mutation associated with the retention of the wild-type receptor in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). For constitutively active (agonist-independent) GPCRs, their attenuated expression on the cell surface, and consequent decreased basal activity due to the dominant-negative effect of truncated splice variants, has pathological consequences. Truncated splice variants may conversely offer protection from disease when expression of co-receptors for binding of infectious agents to cells is attenuated due to ER retention of the wild-type co-receptor. In this review, we will see that GPCRs retained in the ER can still be functionally active but also that highly truncated GPCRs may also be functionally active. Although rare, some truncated splice variants still bind ligand and activate cell signaling responses. More importantly, by forming heterodimers with full-length GPCRs, some truncated splice variants also provide opportunities to generate receptor complexes with unique pharmacological properties. So, instead of assuming that highly truncated GPCRs are associated with faulty transcription processes, it is time to reassess their potential benefit to the host organism.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22938630 PMCID: PMC3477067 DOI: 10.1186/1750-2187-7-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Signal ISSN: 1750-2187
Figure 1Alternative splicing of a GPCR. ( A) The structural domains of GPCRs are annotated as N-tail (amino terminus), EC1-3 (extracellular loop domains 1–3), TM1-7 (transmembrane domains 1–7), IC1-3 (intracellular loop domains 1–3) and C-tail (carboxy terminus).( B) Generation of a 5TM mutant of the ghrelin receptor results from failure to remove the intron between the two coding exons. An alternative stop codon and a polyadenylation signal within the intron (dark box) are used to produce a C-terminal truncated GPCR form that is unable to bind to growth hormone secretagogues [14].
GPCR splice variants with altered or deleted transmembrane domains
| α1A-adrenoceptor | Truncated 6TM mutants. | No cell surface expression. | Yes | [ |
| Calcitonin receptor (CT receptor) | Truncated 6TM mutant. | Rabbit CTRΔe13 is poorly expressed on the cell surface and fails to activate cell signaling. | Yes | [ |
| Chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) | Severely truncated mutants. Ccr5Δ32 is a 5TM mutant. | Natural mutants of human chemokine receptor CCR5 lacking the last 3 or 5 TMDs are non-functional. Ccr5Δ32 complexes with CCR5 and retains CCR5 in the ER, thus reducing cell surface expression. | Yes | [ |
| Dopamine receptor (D3) | D3nf is a truncated 5TM mutant. | Human D3nf mutant has a punctuate perinuclear distribution and does not bind DA-ligands. | Yes | [ |
| GABAB receptor (GABABR1) | GABABR1c has an additional 31 amino acids in TM5. | | No | [ |
| Gastric inhibitory polypeptide receptor (GIP ) | Truncated 4TM mutant. | This inactive mutant receptor inhibited GIP signaling and decreased cell surface expression by retaining WT receptor in the ER. | Yes | [ |
| Ghrelin receptor (or GHS-R1a) | GHS-R1b is a truncated 5TM mutant. | GHS-R1b is a non-signaling splice variant of GHS-R1a. | Yes | [ |
| Gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor (GnRH receptor) | Truncated 5TM mutant. | 5TM variant of human GnRH receptor shows decreased cell surface expression, no ligand binding and no signal transduction. | Yes | [ |
| Growth hormone-releasing hormone receptor (GHRH-R) | Truncated 5TM mutant. | The mutant GHRH-R cannot transduce GHRH signals. | Yes | [ |
| Histamine receptor (H3) | 6TM-rH3R is a truncated 6TM mutant. | Several splice variants of rat H3R do not bind agonist, have an intracellular localization and co-expression with WT receptor decreases cell surface expression and functional responses. | Yes | [ |
| Histamine receptor (H4) | hH4R(302) lacks 88 amino acids from TMD2 to TMD4. hH4R(67) is a ~ 1.5TM truncated mutant. | These human H4R splice variants were localised predominantly intracellularly when expressed in recombinant cells. No ligand binding or cell signaling detected. | Yes | [ |
| Leukotriene B4 receptor (BLT1) | LTB4R-AS1 lacks TMD2 and part of ECL1 (39 amino acid deletion). | Both isoforms of human BLT1 (LTB4R) are expressed in human airway smooth muscle cells. | Yes | [ |
| LTB4R-AS2 is the 3TMD to C-terminus (lacks 100 amino acids). | ||||
| Luteinizing hormone receptor (LH receptor) | Truncated 5TM mutant. | The 5TM mutant of human LH receptor binds ligand (limited) but has no signaling activity. | Yes | [ |
| μ-opioid receptor (μ-OR) | Truncated 6TM mutant. | A 6TM μ-OR variant in mice identified ligands lacking the traditional side effects of classical opiates but maintaining analgesic property. | No | [ |
| Motilin receptor | GPR38-B is a truncated 5TM mutant. | | ? | [ |
| Neurokinin 2 receptor (NK2) | An ICL2-TM4 deletion mutant. | NK2β splice variant is poorly expressed on the cell membrane and is non-signaling. | Yes | [ |
| Neuropeptide Y receptor (Y1) | A truncated 5TM mutant. | The putative hY1-related 5TM accessory protein encoded by the non-spliced hY1 mRNA is not involved in facilitating hY1 production. | No | [ |
| Neurotensin receptor (NTS2) | Truncated 5TM mutant with long tail. | Rat vNTS2 is functionally active and can heterodimerize with NTS2. | No | [ |
| Nociceptin receptor (NOP) | Truncated 4TM mutant. | The rat truncated NOP receptor is localised to cell membranes but is non-functional. | Yes | [ |
| Prostaglandin F2α receptor (FP) | A 6TM truncated mutant (FPs) | hFPS is functionally inactive and highly expressed in the perinuclear region. | Yes | [ |
| A truncated mutant (PTGFR-v2). | No distinct functional role identified. | No | [ | |
| Somatostatin receptor (sst5) | Human sst5TMD5 is a 5TM truncated mutant. | Identified novel truncated but functional human sst5-variants; present in normal and tumoral tissues. | No | [ |
| Human SST5TMD4 is a 4TM truncated mutant. | ||||
| Murine sst5TMD4 is a 4TM truncated mutant. | Three murine variants were functional to mediate ligand-selective-induced variations in Ca2+ and cAMP despite being truncated and displayed a preferential intracellular distribution. | No | [ | |
| Murine sst5TM2 is a 2TM truncated mutant. | ||||
| Murine and rat sst5TM1 has just TM1. | ||||
| Vasopressin receptor, subtype 2 (V2) | V2b is a truncated 6TM mutant. | V2b is retained in the ER where its C-terminus can be either intracellular or extracellular. | Yes | [ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of the structural relationship between wild-type and truncated GPCRs.