Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Higashi Tunehito
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 5000085325
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Agonist-promoted Ubiquitination Differentially Regulates Receptor Trafficking of Endothelin Type A and Type B Receptors

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Koji Terada
Takahiro Horinouchi
Yoichiro Fujioka
Tsunehito Higashi
Prabha Nepal
Mika Horiguchi
Sarita Karki
Chizuru Hatate
Akimasa Hoshi
Takuya Harada
Yosuke Mai
Yusuke Ohba
Soichi Miwa

Summary

Two types of G protein-coupled receptors for endothelin-1 (ET-1), ET type A receptor (ETAR) and ETBR, closely resemble each other, but upon ET-1 stimulation, they follow totally different intracellular trafficking pathways; ETAR is recycled back to plasma membrane, whereas ETBR is targeted to lysosome for degradation. However, the mechanisms for such different fates are unknown. Here we demonstrated that ETBR but not ETAR was ubiquitinated on the cell surface following ET-1 stimulation and that ETBR was internalized and degraded in lysosome more rapidly than ETAR. The mutant ETBR (designated 5KR mutant) in which 5 lysine residues in the C-tail were substituted to arginine was not ubiquitinated, and its rates of internalization and degradation after ET-1 stimulation became slower, being comparable with those of ETAR. Confocal microscopic study showed that following ET-1 stimulation, ETAR and 5KR mutant of ETBR were co-localized mainly with Rab11, a marker of recycling endosome, whereas ETBR was co-localized with Rab7, a marker of late endosome/lysosome. In the 5KR mutant, ET-1-induced ERK phosphorylation and an increase in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration upon repetitive ET-1 stimulation were larger. A series of ETBR mutants (designated 4KR mutant), in which either one of 5 arginine residues of the 5KR mutant was reverted to lysine, were normally ubiquitinated, internalized, and degraded, with ERK phosphorylation being normalized. These results demonstrate that agonist-induced ubiquitination at either lysine residue in the C-tail of ETBR but not ETAR switches intracellular trafficking from recycling to plasma membrane to targeting to lysosome, causing decreases in the cell surface level of ETBR and intracellular signaling.

Magazine(name)

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC

Volume

289

Number Of Pages

51

StartingPage

35283

EndingPage

35295

Date of Issue

2014-12

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1074/jbc.M113.544171

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PMID

 

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DBLP ID