| Literature DB >> 30503206 |
Ursula Quitterer1, Xuebin Fu2, Armin Pohl3, Karam M Bayoumy4, Andreas Langer5, Said AbdAlla5.
Abstract
Preeclampsia is the most frequent pregnancy-related complication worldwide with no cure. While a number of molecular features have emerged, the underlying causal mechanisms behind the disorder remain obscure. Here, we find that increased complex formation between angiotensin II AT1 and bradykinin B2, two G protein-coupled receptors with opposing effects on blood vessel constriction, triggers symptoms of preeclampsia in pregnant mice. Aberrant heteromerization of AT1-B2 led to exaggerated calcium signaling and high vascular smooth muscle mechanosensitivity, which could explain the onset of preeclampsia symptoms at late-stage pregnancy as mechanical forces increase with fetal mass. AT1-B2 receptor aggregation was inhibited by beta-arrestin-mediated downregulation. Importantly, symptoms of preeclampsia were prevented by transgenic ARRB1 expression or a small-molecule drug. Because AT1-B2 heteromerization was found to occur in human placental biopsies from pregnancies complicated by preeclampsia, specifically targeting AT1-B2 heteromerization and its downstream consequences represents a promising therapeutic approach.Entities:
Keywords: AGTR1; ARRB1; BDKRB2; amlodipine; angiotensin II; biased agonist; bradykinin; heterodimer; mechanosensitivity; preeclampsia
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30503206 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2018.10.050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582