| Literature DB >> 36247000 |
Hyunbin Kim1,2, In-Yeop Baek1,3, Jihye Seong1,2,3.
Abstract
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) regulate a wide range of physiological and pathophysiological cellular processes, thus it is important to understand how GPCRs are activated and function in various cellular contexts. In particular, the activation process of GPCRs is dynamically regulated upon various extracellular stimuli, and emerging evidence suggests the subcellular functions of GPCRs at endosomes and other organelles. Therefore, precise monitoring of the GPCR activation process with high spatiotemporal resolution is required to investigate the underlying molecular mechanisms of GPCR functions. In this review, we will introduce genetically encoded fluorescent biosensors that can precisely monitor the real-time GPCR activation process in live cells. The process includes the binding of extracellular GPCR ligands, conformational change of GPCR, recruitment of G proteins or β-arrestin, GPCR internalization and trafficking, and the GPCR-related downstream signaling events. We will introduce fluorescent GPCR biosensors based on a variety of strategies such as fluorescent resonance energy transfer (FRET), bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET), circular permuted fluorescent protein (cpFP), and nanobody. We will discuss the pros and cons of these GPCR biosensors as well as their applications in GPCR research.Entities:
Keywords: BRET; FRET; GPCR; circular permutation; fluorescent protein; genetically encoded fluorescent biosensor; nanobody
Year: 2022 PMID: 36247000 PMCID: PMC9559200 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.1007893
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1An overview of GPCR activation, trafficking, and degradation. (A) GPCRs bind to the extracellular ligands or other stimuli at the plasma membrane. (B) The ligand-bound GPCRs change their conformations, in particular between TM5 and TM6. (C–D) The conformational changes of the GPCRs induce the recruitment of G proteins (C) or β-arrestin (D) to initiate the downstream signaling pathways. (E) The recruited β-arrestin promotes the internalization of GPCRs via the clathrin-mediated endocytosis pathway. Some GPCRs can maintain their activity and function at the internalized endosomes or subcellular organelles. (F) Following the endosomal trafficking pathways, the GPCRs can finally be degraded in the lysosome. (G) Some GPCRs form dimers or oligomers. Functional crosstalk between these GPCRs may influence the ligand binding affinity, downstream signaling pathways, and trafficking patterns.
FIGURE 2FRET/BRET-based GPCR biosensors. (A) Schematic design of the ligand-sensing biosensors based on FRET (Tsien, 2006). The FRET signal between cyan and yellow FP inserted in the N- and C-terminus of the ligand-sensing domain is increased upon ligand binding. (B) Schematic design of the FRET/BRET-based biosensors detecting the conformational change of GPCRs (Griffin et al., 1998; Vilardaga et al., 2005). In the right panel, a blue circle represents a luciferase and a star displays FlAsH. (C) Schematic design of the FRET/BRET-based biosensors detecting the recruitment of G proteins (Malik et al., 2013; Wan et al., 2018; Maziarz et al., 2020). (D) Schematic design of the FRET/BRET-based biosensors detecting the recruitment of β-arrestin (Charest et al., 2005; Nuber et al., 2016). (E) Schematic design of the FRET-based biosensors detecting the dimerization of GPCRs (Lukasiewicz et al., 2010).
Examples of currently available FRET and BRET biosensors for GPCR studies.
| Detection step | Target GPCR | Ligand used | Detection method | FRET or BRET pair | Cell lines tested | Notes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ligand binding | GltI (mGluR) | Glutamate | FRET | ECFP-Venus | HEK293, HeLa |
| |
| Conformational change of GPCR | α2AAR | Noradrenaline, Norepinephrine | FRET | CFP-YFP, CFP-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| |
| β1AR | Norepinephrine, Isoproterenol | FRET | Cerulean-YFP, Cerulean-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| ||
| β2AR | Isoproterenol | FRET | CFP-YFP, CFP-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| ||
| A2AR | Adenosine | FRET | CFP-YFP, CFP-FlAsH | HEK293, COS-1 |
| ||
| B1R | Carboxypeptidase M | FRET | CFP-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| ||
| B2R | Bradykinin, Mechanical force | FRET | CFP-YFP | HEK293, BAEC |
| ||
| H1R | Histamine, Mechanical force | FRET | Cerulean-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| ||
| mAChR | Carbachol | FRET | CFP-FlAsH | HEK-TsA201 |
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| PTH1R | PTH, Mechanical force | FRET | CFP-YFP, Cerulean-Citrine | HEK293, NC3T3-E1 |
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| AT1R | Angiotensin II | BRET | RLuc-YFP | CHO |
| ||
| B1R | Carboxypeptidase M | BRET | RLuc-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| ||
| G protein recruitment | β2AR | Isoproterenol | FRET | mCerulean-mCitrine | HEK293 |
| |
| V1AR | AVP | FRET | mCerulean-mCitrine | HEK293 |
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| A1AR | Adenosine | FRET | Cerulean-Venus | HEK293 | Mini-G |
| |
| α2AAR | Brimonidine | BRET | NLuc-YFP | HEK293T | BERKY |
| |
| β2AR | Isoproterenol | BRET | RLuc-GFP | HEK293T |
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| β2AR | Isoproterenol | BRET | RLuc8-Venus | HEK293 | Mini-G |
| |
| GLP-1R | GLP-1 | BRET | NLuc-Venus | HEK293 | Mini-G |
| |
| β-arrestin recruitment | β2AR | Isoproterenol | FRET | CFP-FlAsH | HEK293 |
| |
| β2AR, V2R | Isoproterenol, AVP | BRET | RLuc-YFP | HEK293, COS |
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| β2AR, AT1R | Isoproterenol, Angiotensin II | BRET | NLuc-CyOFP1 | HEK293T |
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| PTH1R | PTH | BRET | RLuc-FlAsH | HEK293 |
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| GPCR dimerization | 5HT2A/DRD2 | DOI, Quinpirole | FRET | ECFP-EYFP | HEK293 |
| |
| mGluR1 | Quisqualate | FRET | CFP-YFP | HEK293, COS-7 |
| ||
| 5HT2A/DRD2 | 5-HT, Quinpirole | BRET | RLuc-GFP2 | HEK293T |
|
GltI, Glutamate/aspartate import solute-binding protein; α2AAR, α2A adrenergic receptor; β1AR, β1 adrenergic receptor; β2AR, β2 adrenergic receptor; A2AR, A2A adenosine receptors; B1R, B1-bradykinin receptor; B2R, B2-bradykinin receptor; H1R, Histamine H1 receptor; mAChR, Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor; PTH1R, Parathyroid hormone 1 receptor; AT1R, Angiotensin II type 1 receptor; V1AR, Vasopressin receptor 1A; A1AR, A1A adenosine receptors; GLP-1R, Glucagon like peptide-1 receptor; V2R, Vasopressin receptor 2; 5HT2A, Serotonin receptor 2A; DRD2, Dopamine receptor 2; mGluR1, Metabotropic glutamate receptor 1; PTH, Parathyroid hormone; AVP, Arginine Vasopressin; GLP-1, Glucagon like peptide-1; DOI, 2,5-Dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine.
FIGURE 3The GPCR biosensors utilizing cpFP and nanobody. (A) Schematic design of the ligand-sensing biosensors based on cpFP (Marvin et al., 2013). The fluorescent signal of cpFP inserted in the ligand-sensing domain is increased upon ligand binding. (B) Schematic design of fluorescent biosensors detecting the conformational change of GPCRs (Patriarchi et al., 2018; Sun et al., 2018). In the left panel, the fluorescent signal of the cpFP inserted in the ICL3 region of the GPCR is increased upon the conformational change of the GPCR. In the right panel, the YFP-tagged nanobody can specifically bind to the GPCR of active conformation. As a luciferase is fused to the GPCR, thus the BRET signal between the YFP and the luciferase is increased. (C) Schematic design of the cpFP- and nanobody-based biosensors detecting the recruitment of G proteins (Hoare et al., 2020). (D) Different color variants of cpFP-based GPCR biosensors (Patriarchi et al., 2020; Sun et al., 2020; Labouesse and Patriarchi, 2021).
FIGURE 4Monitoring endosomal trafficking and degradation process of GPCRs with the GPCR-pH sensor. To confirm that GPCRs encounter the more acidic environment during the endosomal trafficking and degradation process (Marchese et al., 2008; Kim et al., 2021a), a GPCR-pH sensor is designed, which is composed of β2AR, a pH-sensitive FP (Bizzarri et al., 2009; Shen et al., 2014) and a pH-stable reference FP, which can confirm that GPCRs encounter acidic environment during endosomal trafficking pathways. Acidification in the endosomes and lysosomes decreases the fluorescent intensity of the pH-sensitive RFP, but not the reference FP, thus the acidic state of GPCRs can be predicted by the intensity ratios of pH sensitive-FP (red) and reference FP (green).