| Literature DB >> 34663757 |
Maria L Price1,2, Cameron D Ley1,2, Caroline M Gorvin1,2.
Abstract
Ghrelin is a peptide hormone secreted primarily by the stomach that acts upon the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR1), a G protein-coupled receptor whose functions include growth hormone secretion, appetite regulation, energy expenditure, regulation of adiposity, and insulin release. Following the discovery that GHSR1a stimulates food intake, receptor antagonists were developed as potential therapies to regulate appetite. However, despite reductions in signalling, the desired effects on appetite were absent. Studies in the past 15 years have demonstrated GHSR1a can interact with other transmembrane proteins, either by direct binding (i.e. heteromerisation) or via signalling cross-talk. These interactions have various effects on GHSR1a signalling including preferential coupling to one pathway (i.e. biased signalling), coupling to a unique G protein (G protein switching), suppression of GHSR1a signalling, and enhancement of signalling by both receptors. While many of these interactions have been shown in cells overexpressing the proteins of interest and remain to be verified in tissues, substantial evidence exists showing that GHSR1a and the dopamine receptor D1 (DRD1) form heteromers, which promote synaptic plasticity and formation of hippocampal memory. Additionally, a reduction in GHSR1a-DRD1 complexes in favour of establishment of GHSR1a-Aβ complexes correlates with Alzheimer's disease, indicating that GHSR1a heteromers may have pathological functions. Herein, we summarise the evidence published to date describing interactions between GHSR1a and transmembrane proteins, discuss the experimental strengths and limitations of these studies, describe the physiological evidence for each interaction, and address their potential as novel drug targets for appetite regulation, Alzheimer's disease, insulin secretion, and inflammation.Entities:
Keywords: GPCR; MRAP2; appetite; dopamine receptors; heterodimerisation; receptor cross-talk
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34663757 PMCID: PMC8630777 DOI: 10.1530/JOE-21-0206
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol ISSN: 0022-0795 Impact factor: 4.286
Figure 1Mechanisms by which GHSR1a signalling is modified by interacting proteins. Schematic showing the different mechanisms by which GHSR1a signalling is modified by interactions with transmembrane proteins. All diagrams depict monomeric receptors, although there is evidence that heterotetramers may occur. GHSR1a is understood to primarily signal via Gq/11 pathways to activate Ca2+i pathways. This involves both constitutive and agonist-mediated signalling, and association between GHSR1a and β-arrestins may increase RhoA pathways. (A) Interaction with MRAP2 impairs GHSR1a constitutive activity and β-arrestin recruitment, and biases signalling towards enhanced agonist-mediated Ca2+i signalling. (B) Interactions between GHSR1a and MC3R enhance MC3R-mediated Gs-cAMP signalling and impair ghrelin-mediated increases in Ca2+i. Similar mechanisms are observed for GPR83, 5-HT2CR, and σ1R. (C) Interactions between GHSR1a and OX1R switch G protein coupling from Gq to GS. Interactions with GHSR1b and SSTR2 also result in a switch in G protein coupling that is governed by the stoichiometry of each receptor. In the presence of high GHSR1b expression, the inactive receptor exerts a dominant-negative effect on GHSR1a-mediated signalling. When GHSR1b expression is low, as in hippocampal and striatal neurons, GHSR1a interacts with both GHSR1b and DRD1 to activate GS-cAMP signalling. (D) Interactions between GHSR1a and DRD2 and DRD1 result in reciprocal increases in signalling by both receptors. (E) Interactions with prostanoid receptors impair GHSR1a constitutive signalling. AGRP, agouti-related peptide; Ca2+i, intracellular Ca2+; DRD1, dopamine receptor D1; DRD2, dopamine receptor D2; EP3-I, prostaglandin E2 receptor subtype EP3-I; GHSR1, growth hormone secretagogue receptor; GPR83, G protein-coupled receptor-83; MC3R, melanocortin-3 receptor; MRAP2, melanocortin receptor accessory protein-2; OX1R, orexin-1 receptor; TPα, thromboxane prostanoid A2 receptor; 5-HT2CR, serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine) subtype-2C receptor; σ1R; neuronal sigma-1 receptor.
Reported protein interactions with GHSR1a.
| Interacting proteins | Cell lines/models | Techniques used to confirm interactions | Effect on GHSR1a signalling | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MRAP2 | Overexpression in CHO. | Co-immunoprecipitation, NanoBiT | Potentiates ghrelin-mediated Gq signalling by impairing constitutive activity. | (Srisai |
| SSTR5 | INS-1 and HEK293 overexpressing SSTR5 and GHSR1a | TR-FRET in INS-1 cells | GHSR1a-SSTR5 heteromers impair somatostatin responsiveness in favour of ghrelin responses. However, more recent studies have shown that GHSR1a is not expressed in pancreatic β-cells and it is unlikely the two receptors interact in the pancreas. | (Tong |
| MC3R | Overexpression in HEK293 and COS-7. | Co-localisation by confocal microscopy, ELISA, FRET | Enhances MC3R-mediated cAMP signalling and inhibits GHSR1a ligand-induced and basal signalling. | (Rediger |
| GPR83 | Overexpression in HEK293 and a mouse hypothalamic N41 cell-line. | ELISA, YFP-protein complementation assay | Reduces GHSR1a-mediated IP3 signalling. | (Muller |
| 5-HT2CR | HEK293 stably expressing GHSR1a. | Co-localisation by confocal microscopy | Reduces ghrelin-mediated calcium influx. | (Schellekens |
| OX1R | Overexpression in HEK293. | Co-localisation by confocal microscopy, BRET, FRET, co-immunoprecipitation, bimolecular fluorescence complementation | Ghrelin enhances cAMP activity when receptors are co-expressed by increasing Gs signalling. | (Xue |
| DRD1 | HEK293 overexpressing the receptors, SK-N-SH neuronal cell-line. | Co-localisation by fluorescence deconvolution microscopy, co-immunoprecipitation, BRET, single-molecule TIRF, PLA | Ghrelin and dopamine enhance cAMP signalling. | (Jiang |
| DRD2 | Overexpression of GHSR1a in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma and HEK293 cells. | TR-FRET in HEK293 and hypothalamic tissue. | Dopamine agonists induce Ca2+
i signalling, which is suppressed by antagonists of either receptor. | (Kern |
| GHS-R1b | HEK293 & HEK293T overexpression. | BRET, immunoprecipitation, sucrose-density gradients | Reduce intracellular calcium, pERK and β-arrestin signalling. | (Leung |
| σ1R | HEK293T | Immunocytochemistry, BRET in HEK293T | Cocaine suppresses GHSR1a-mediated reductions in cAMP and phosphorylation of ERK1/2. | (Aguinaga |
| OTR | HEK293 | Co-localisation by confocal microscopy, FRET | Reduces oxytocin-induced Ca2+
i signalling. | (Wallace Fitzsimons |
| Prostanoid receptors (EP3-I and TPα receptor) | HEK293 | BRET, co-immunoprecipitation | Reduces total GHSR1a expression, increases GHSR1a intracellular localisation and reduces GHSR1a constitutive activity | (Chow |
AMPAR, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; BRET, bioluminescence resonance energy transfer; Ca2+ I, intracellular calcium; CaMKII, calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; Cav2.2, N-type voltage-gated calcium channel; ERK1/2, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; FRET, Förster resonance energy transfer; IP3, inositol trisphosphate; PLA, proximity ligation assay; PLC, phospholipase C; SMALP, styrene maleic acid copolymer membrane discs; TIRF, total internal reflection fluorescence; TR-FRET, time resolved-FRET; YFP, yellow fluorescent protein.
Summary of studies in which GHSR1a interactions with transmembrane proteins have been investigated in physiological systems.
| Interacting proteins | Cell lines/models | References |
|---|---|---|
| MRAP2 | In MRAP2-knockout mice: | (Srisai |
| GPR83 | - Acute food intake is significantly higher in | (Muller |
| 5-HT2CR | - Administration of a 5-HT2CR antagonist enhanced ghrelin-induced increases in food intake, and extended the duration of ghrelin’s orexigenic effect. | (Schellekens |
| DRD1 | (Kern | |
| DRD2 | - Agonists of DRD2 and GHSR1a stimulated calcium in primary hypothalamic neurons. | (Kern |
| GHS-R1b | In striatal neurons – a DRD1 antagonist blocked ghrelin-induced Gs-mediated cAMP accumulation. | (Navarro |
| σ1R | In primary striatal neurons – impaired GHSR1a-mediated signalling on pre-treatment with cocaine or PRE-084. | (Aguinaga |
AGRP, agouti-related peptide; AMPAR, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor; AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; CaMKII, calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; LTP, long-term potentiation.