Rescue of defective G protein–coupled receptor function in vivo by intermolecular cooperation

Author:

Rivero-Müller Adolfo,Chou Yen-Yin,Ji Inhae,Lajic Svetlana,Hanyaloglu Aylin C.,Jonas Kim,Rahman Nafis,Ji Tae H.,Huhtaniemi Ilpo

Abstract

G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) are ubiquitous mediators of signaling of hormones, neurotransmitters, and sensing. The old dogma is that a one ligand/one receptor complex constitutes the functional unit of GPCR signaling. However, there is mounting evidence that some GPCRs form dimers or oligomers during their biosynthesis, activation, inactivation, and/or internalization. This evidence has been obtained exclusively from cell culture experiments, and proof for the physiological significance of GPCR di/oligomerization in vivo is still missing. Using the mouse luteinizing hormone receptor (LHR) as a model GPCR, we demonstrate that transgenic mice coexpressing binding-deficient and signaling-deficient forms of LHR can reestablish normal LH actions through intermolecular functional complementation of the mutant receptors in the absence of functional wild-type receptors. These results provide compelling in vivo evidence for the physiological relevance of intermolecular cooperation in GPCR signaling.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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