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Vol. 294, Issue 3, 1053-1062, September 2000
Laboratory of Molecular Biology (Y.L., X.J., G.S.K., J.B.) and
Laboratory of Cellular Biology (J.N.), National Institute on Deafness
and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health,
Rockville, Maryland; Digestive Diseases Branch, National Institute of
Diabetes, Digestive and Kidney Diseases (S.M., R.T.J.), National
Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; and Laboratory of Structural
Biology, Center for Information Technology (Z.L.), National Institutes
of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
The gastrin-releasing peptide receptor (GRP-R) is a G protein-coupled
receptor that mediates a variety of cellular responses, including cell
growth and modulation of neuronal activity by activation of
heterotrimeric GTP-binding proteins in the Gq family. To understand the
regulation of GRP-R signaling we have substituted alanine for each of
10 amino acid residues within the transmembrane (TM) helices of the
GRP-R predicted to project into the binding pocket of the receptor and
analyzed the importance of each of these residues for receptor
function. Two mutations showed selective loss of either agonist (Y285A)
or antagonist (F313A) affinity for the GRP-R. In addition, we
identified two amino acid residues, Phe270 and
Asn281, in the sixth TM segment, which are important
for receptor-G protein interaction. In a competition-binding assay with
an antagonist radioligand, bombesin showed a 20- to 100-fold decreased
affinity for the N281A and F270A mutant GRP-R compared with wild-type
GRP-R. The saturation-binding isotherms are best fit by a two-state
model, indicating that the receptors are in either a low-affinity
(KD2) or a high-affinity
(KD1) state. The ratio of the two affinities (KD2/KD1) was
significantly increased for both mutants compared with wild-type GRP-R,
whereas the fraction of mutant receptors in the high-affinity state
(R1) was decreased.
GDP/guanosine-5'-O-(3-thio)triphosphate exchange
catalyzed by the N281A mutant was lower than that observed for the
wild-type GRP-R. However, for both mutants, bombesin was still able to
stimulate 1,4,5-inositol triphosphate in transfected cells albeit with
reduced activity. We conclude that these two TM residues are important
for receptor-G protein coupling, and postulate that each mutation may
affect GRP-R conformational change to the high-affinity, G
protein-coupled state.
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