Internalization Determinants of the Parathyroid Hormone Receptor Differentially Regulate β-Arrestin/Receptor Association
pmid: 11726668
Internalization Determinants of the Parathyroid Hormone Receptor Differentially Regulate β-Arrestin/Receptor Association
beta-Arrestins have been implicated in regulating internalization of the parathyroid hormone receptor (PTHR), but the structural features in the receptor required for this effect are unknown. In the present study performed in HEK-293 cells, we demonstrated that different topological domains of PTHR are implicated in agonist-dependent receptor internalization; truncation of the cytoplasmic tail (PTHR-TR), selective mutations of the cytoplasmic tail to remove the sites of parathyroid hormone (PTH)-stimulated phosphorylation (PTHR-PD), and mutations in the third transmembrane helix (N289A) or in the third cytoplasmic loop (K382A) resulted in a 30-60% reduction in (125)I-PTH-related protein internalization. To better define the role of these internalization determinants, we have tested the ability of these mutant PTHRs to associate with beta-arrestins by using three different methodological approaches: 1) ability of overexpression of beta-arrestins to restore the internalization of (125)I-PTH-related protein for the mutant PTHRs; 2) visualization of PTH-mediated trafficking of beta-arrestin1 and -2 fused to the green fluorescent protein with receptors by confocal microscopy; 3) quantification of beta-arrestin1-green fluorescent protein translocation by Western blot. Our data reveal that the receptor' cytoplasmic tail contains determinants of beta-arrestin interaction that are distinct from the phosphorylation sites and are sufficient for transient association of beta-arrestin2, but stable association requires receptor phosphorylation. Determinants in the receptor's core (Asn-289 and Lys-382) appear to regulate internalization of the receptor/beta-arrestin complex toward early endocytic endosomes during the initial step of endocytosis.
- University of California, San Francisco United States
- University Hospital Würzburg Germany
- University of Würzburg Germany
- Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie der Bundeswehr Germany
Cytoplasm, DNA, Complementary, Microscopy, Confocal, Arrestins, Lysine, Blotting, Western, Cell Membrane, Green Fluorescent Proteins, Immunoblotting, Ligands, Endocytosis, Cell Line, Kinetics, Luminescent Proteins, Mutation, Cyclic AMP, Humans, Asparagine, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding
Cytoplasm, DNA, Complementary, Microscopy, Confocal, Arrestins, Lysine, Blotting, Western, Cell Membrane, Green Fluorescent Proteins, Immunoblotting, Ligands, Endocytosis, Cell Line, Kinetics, Luminescent Proteins, Mutation, Cyclic AMP, Humans, Asparagine, Phosphorylation, Protein Binding
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