| Literature DB >> 24860547 |
Peishen Zhao1, Matthew Metcalf1, Nigel W Bunnett2.
Abstract
In addition to their role in protein degradation and digestion, proteases can also function as hormone-like signaling molecules that regulate vital patho-physiological processes, including inflammation, hemostasis, pain, and repair mechanisms. Certain proteases can signal to cells by cleaving protease-activated receptors (PARs), a family of four G protein-coupled receptors. PARs are expressed by almost all cell types, control important physiological and disease-relevant processes, and are an emerging therapeutic target for major diseases. Most information about PAR activation and function derives from studies of a few proteases, for example thrombin in the case of PAR1, PAR3, and PAR4, and trypsin in the case of PAR2 and PAR4. These proteases cleave PARs at established sites with the extracellular N-terminal domains, and expose tethered ligands that stabilize conformations of the cleaved receptors that activate the canonical pathways of G protein- and/or β-arrestin-dependent signaling. However, a growing number of proteases have been identified that cleave PARs at divergent sites to activate distinct patterns of receptor signaling and trafficking. The capacity of these proteases to trigger distinct signaling pathways is referred to as biased signaling, and can lead to unique patho-physiological outcomes. Given that a different repertoire of proteases are activated in various patho-physiological conditions that may activate PARs by different mechanisms, signaling bias may account for the divergent actions of proteases and PARs. Moreover, therapies that target disease-relevant biased signaling pathways may be more effective and selective approaches for the treatment of protease- and PAR-driven diseases. Thus, rather than mediating the actions of a few proteases, PARs may integrate the biological actions of a wide spectrum of proteases in different patho-physiological conditions.Entities:
Keywords: G proteins; PARs; biased signaling; proteases; signal transduction; β-arrestins
Year: 2014 PMID: 24860547 PMCID: PMC4026716 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2014.00067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Mechanisms of canonical and biased PAR signaling. (A) Canonical mechanisms of PAR signaling. Proteases such as trypsin and thrombin cleave PARs at canonical cleavage sites, unmasking the tethered ligand domain, which binds to the second extracellular loops of the cleaved receptors. PARs that are activated by such mechanisms often couple to multiple G protein-dependent and β-arrestin-dependent signaling pathways. (B) Biased mechanisms of PAR signaling. Proteases such as elastase, MMP1, and APC cleave PARs at sites distinct from the canonical cleavage site. Cleavage may unmask a new tethered ligand that could interact with domains in the cleaved receptor, leading to the activation of unique and biased signaling pathways. (C) APs are synthetic peptides that mimic the tethered ligands revealed by proteases that cleave at canonical or biased sites. APs can activate the same pathways as proteases, although tethered ligand and soluble peptides may also trigger different signaling pathways and generate biased signal. (D) Some proteases such as elastase that cleave PARs to not appear to reveal tethered ligands, suggesting that proteolysis alone may activate the receptor. (E) Proteolytic disarming of PARs. Proteases such as cathepsin G cleave PARs and remove or destroy tethered ligands, thereby disarming proteolytic activation.
Activation of PAR.
| Receptor | Protease | Cleavage site | Activating peptide | Signaling pathways | Physiological response | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thrombin | Platelet aggregation, endothelial barrier disruption, vascular smooth muscle cells proliferation | ( | |||||
| Canonical cleavage | Factor Xa | 38LDPR ↓SFLL45 | SFLLRN-NH2 | Gαq/Ca2+, Gα12/13-Rho, β-arrestin/ERK1/2 | Pro-inflammation, endothelial barrier protection, inhibition of cancer cell migration, fibroblast proliferation | ( | |
| Plasmin | Platelet activation and deactivation (by non-specific cleavage) | ( | |||||
| MMP1 | 36ATLD ↓PRSF43 | PRSFLLRN-NH2 | Gα12/13-Rho, MAPK | Platelet thrombogenesis and clot retraction, disruption of barrier function, matrix remodeling, vascular angiogenesis | ( | ||
| MMP13 | 39DPRS ↓FLLR46 | Not studied | Gαq/Ca2+, ERK1/2 | Participate in β-AR over activation-dependent cardiac dysfunction | ( | ||
| Non-canonical cleavage | Elastase | 42SFLL ↓RNPN49 | RNPNDKYEPF-NH2 | Gαi/MAPK | Stress fiber formation and endothelial barrier permeability | ( | |
| APC | 43FLLR ↓NPND50 | NPNDKYEPF-NH2 | β-arrestin/Rac1, Akt | Cytoprotective, endothelial barrier protection | ( | ||
| Proteinase-3 | 33ATNA ↓TLDP40 | TLDPRSF-NH2 | Gαi/MAPK | Stress fiber formation and endothelial barrier permeability | ( | ||
| Other proteases | Granzyme K | N.D. | N.D. | ERK1/2, p38 MAPK | Cytokine secretion and fibroblast proliferation | ( |
Activation of PAR.
| Receptor | Protease | Cleavage site | Activating peptide | Signaling pathways | Physiological response | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canonical cleavage | Thrombin | 35LPIK ↓TFRG42 | TFRGAP-NH2 (for PAR1 and PAR2) | ERK1/2 | IL-8 production | ( | |
| Non-canonical cleavage | APC | 38KTFR ↓GAPP45 | GAPPNSFEEFPFS | N.D. | Cytoprotective | ( | |
| Canonical cleavage | Thrombin | Platelet activation and aggregation; platelet endostatin release | ( | ||||
| Trypsin | 44PAPR ↓GYPG51 | GYPGQV-NH2 | Ca2+ | Neutrophil recruitment | ( | ||
| Plasmin | Platelet activation and aggregation | ( | |||||
| Cathepsin G | Platelet activation and aggregation | ( | |||||
| Other proteases | MASP1 | N.D. | N.D. | Ca2+ NF-kB, p38 MAPK | N.D. | ( |
Figure 2PAR. N-terminus of human PAR1 (1–114). The residues in red denote the canonical tethered ligand and a corresponding AP that is revealed by thrombin cleavage. The cleavage sites for different proteases and the corresponding AP for each protease are indicated in the boxes. Gray shading represents membrane.
Figure 3PAR. N-terminus of human PAR2 (1–84). The residues in red denote the canonical tethered ligand and a corresponding AP that is revealed by trypsin cleavage. The corresponding APs for each protease are indicated in the boxes. Gray shading represents membrane.
Activation of PAR.
| Receptor | Protease | Cleavage site | Activating peptide | Signaling pathways | Physiological response | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trypsin | Pro-inflammation, induction of hypotension, mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia, cardio protective (reduced infarct size) | ( | |||||
| Canonical cleavage | Tryptase | 33SKGR ↓SLIG40 | SLIGKV-NH2 | Gαq/Ca2+, Gα12/13-Rho, MAPK ERK1/2, β-arrestin, Akt, Gαi and Gαs/cAMP | Pro-inflammatory and hyperalgesia; increase paracellular permeability of intestine; mast cell degranulation; cell proliferation | ( | |
| Factor VIIa | Cancer cells migration and invasion | ( | |||||
| Factor Xa | Cancer cells migration and invasion | ( | |||||
| KLKs | Cell proliferation | ( | |||||
| Elastase | 64FSAS ↓VLTG71 | Not active | Rho/ERK1/2 | N.D. | ( | ||
| Non-canonical cleavage | Proteinase-3 | 57VFSV ↓DEFS64 | Not active | N.D. | N.D. | ( | |
| Cathepsin G | 61VDEF ↓SASV68 | Not active | N.D. | N.D. | ( | ||
| Cathepsin S | 53VTVE ↓TVFS60 | TVFSVDEFSA-NH2 | Gαs/cAMP | Pro-inflammatory, visceral hyperalgesia, itch | ( | ||
| Other proteases | Gingipain-R | N.D. | N.D. | Gαq/Ca2+, ERK1/2 | Activate human gingival fibroblasts and modulate immune response | ( | |
| KLK 14 | N.D. | N.D. | Gαq/Ca2+, ERK1/2 | Colon tumorigenesis, pro-inflammatory | ( |