The addictive potential of opioids may be related to their differential ability to induce G protein signaling and endocytosis. We compared the ability of 20 ligands (sampled from the main chemical classes of opioids) to promote the association of and ␦ receptors with G protein or -arrestin 2. Receptor-arrestin binding was monitored by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) in intact cells, where pertussis toxin experiments indicated that the interaction was minimally affected by receptor signaling. To assess receptor-G protein coupling without competition from arrestins, we employed a cell-free BRET assay using membranes isolated from cells expressing luminescent receptors and fluorescent G 1 . In this system, the agonistinduced enhancement of BRET (indicating shortening of distance between the two proteins) was G␣-mediated (as shown by sensitivity to pertussis toxin and guanine nucleotides) and yielded data consistent with the known pharmacology of the ligands. We found marked differences of efficacy for G protein and arrestin, with a pattern suggesting more restrictive structural requirements for arrestin efficacy. The analysis of such differences identified a subset of structures showing a marked discrepancy between efficacies for G protein and arrestin. Addictive opiates like morphine and oxymorphone exhibited large differences both at ␦ and receptors. Thus, they were effective agonists for G protein coupling but acted as competitive enkephalins antagonists (␦) or partial agonists () for arrestin. This arrestin-selective antagonism resulted in inhibition of short and long term events mediated by arrestin, such as rapid receptor internalization and down-regulation.Physiological agonists are usually equally efficient in promoting the interaction of receptors with G protein and arrestin, but manmade analogues can show divergent molecular efficacies for the two transducers (1, 2). This phenomenon, often addressed with a pictorial terminology (3-5), has attracted great interest and if better understood might lead to new types of drugs.The differential efficacy of opioids for G protein and arrestin interactions is also important in the mechanism of opiate addiction. As reported earlier, the addictive opiate morphine cannot induce and actually blocks desensitization and G protein uncoupling of ␦-opioid receptors (DOPR) 2 in neuroblastoma or in transfected cells (6, 7). Subsequent work shows that morphine is a poor inducer of rapid arrestin-dependent endocytosis for both ␦ and (MOPR) receptors (8 -11), although one exception is in striatum neurons with high levels of G protein receptor kinases (12).Two theories predict a relation between lack of endocytosis and the addiction liability of opioids, but the proposed explanations are radically different. One sees rapid endocytosis as a means to quench receptor signaling. Thus, the abnormally sustained signaling pattern produced by a drug that cannot internalize the receptor would promote post-receptor compensatory mechanisms, which may be responsible for the...
Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts (MLC), a rare leukodystrophy characterized by macrocephaly, subcortical fluid cysts and myelin vacuolation, has been linked to mutations in the MLC1 gene. This gene encodes a membrane protein that is highly expressed in astrocytes. Based on MLC pathological features, it was proposed that astrocyte-mediated defects in ion and fluid homeostasis could account for the alterations observed in MLC-affected brains. However, the role of MLC1 and the effects of pathological mutations on astrocyte osmoregulatory functions have still to be demonstrated. Using human astrocytoma cells stably overexpressing wild-type MLC1 or three known MLC-associated pathological mutations, we investigated MLC1 involvement in astrocyte reaction to osmotic changes using biochemical, dynamic video imaging and immunofluorescence techniques. We have found that MLC1 overexpressed in astrocytoma cells is mainly localized in the plasma membrane, is part of the Na,K-ATPase-associated molecular complex that includes the potassium channel Kir4.1, syntrophin and aquaporin-4 and functionally interacts with the calcium permeable channel TRPV4 (transient receptor potential vanilloid-4 cation channel) which mediates swelling-induced cytosolic calcium increase and volume recovery in response to hyposmosis. Pathological MLC mutations cause changes in MLC1 expression and intracellular localization as well as in the astrocyte response to osmotic changes by altering MLC1 molecular interactions with the Na,K-ATPase molecular complex and abolishing the increase in calcium influx induced by hyposmosis and treatment with the TRPV4 agonist 4αPDD. These data demonstrate, for the first time, that MLC1 plays a role in astrocyte osmo-homeostasis and that defects in intracellular calcium dynamics may contribute to MLC pathogenesis.
In this study, the Galpha(qi5) protein was used to force the human nociceptin/orphanin FQ (N/OFQ) peptide (NOP) receptor to signal through the Ca(2+) pathway in CHO cells. [Ca(2+)](i) levels were monitored using the fluorometer FlexStation II and the Ca(2+) dye Fluo 4 AM. Concentration response curves were generated with a panel of full and partial agonists, while NOP antagonists were assessed in inhibition-response curves. The following rank order of potency of antagonists was measured: SB - 612111 > J - 113397 = Trap - 101 > or = UFP - 101 > [Nphe1]N/OF Q(1 - 13)NH2 >> naloxone, which is superimposable to literature findings. The rank order of potency of full and partial agonists is also similar to that obtained in previous studies with the exception of a panel of ligands (UFP-112, Ro 64-6198, ZP120, UFP-113) whose potency was relatively low in the Galpha(qi5)-NOP receptor calcium assay. Interestingly, these NOP ligands are characterized by slow kinetic of interaction with the NOP receptor, as demonstrated by bioassay experiments. These results demonstrated that the FlexStation II-Galpha(qi5)-NOP receptor calcium assay represents an adequate and useful screening for NOP receptor ligands, particularly for antagonists.
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