Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Nakamura Motonao
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code 6000014705
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Constitutively active GPR43 is crucial for proper leukocyte differentiation.

Bibliography Type

Joint Author

Author

Miyasato,S., Iwata,K., Mura,R., Nakamura,S., Yanagida,K., Shindou,H., Nagata,Y., Kawahara,M., Yamaguchi,S., Aoki,J., Inoue,A., Naganune,T., Shimizu,T., and Nakamura,M.

Summary

The G protein-coupled receptors, GPR43 (free fatty acid receptor 2, FFA2) and GPR41 (free fatty acid receptor 3, FFA3), are activated by short-chain fatty acids produced under various conditions, including microbial fermentation of carbohydrates. Previous studies have implicated this receptor energy homeostasis and immune responses as well as in cell growth arrest and apoptosis. Here, we observed the expression of both receptors in human blood cells and a remarkable enhancement in leukemia cell lines (HL-60, U937, and THP-1 cells) during differentiation. A reporter assay revealed that GPR43 is coupled with Gai and Ga12/13 and is constitutively active without any stimuli. Specific blockers of GPR43, GLPG0974 and CATPB, function as inverse agonists because treatment with these compounds significantly reduces constitutive activity. In HL-60 cells, enhanced expression of GPR43 led to growth arrest through Ga12/13. In addition, blockage of GPR43 activity in these cells significantly impaired their adherent properties due to the reduction of adhesion molecules. We further revealed that enhanced GPR43 activity induces F-actin formation. However, the activity of GPR43 did not contribute to butyrate-induced apoptosis in differentiated HL-60 cells because of the ineffectiveness of the inverse agonist on cell death. Collectively, these results suggest that GPR43, which possesses constitutive activity, is crucial for growth arrest, followed by the proper differentiation of leukocytes.

Magazine(name)

The FASEB Journal

Publisher

Volume

DOI:10.1096/fj.202201591R

Number Of Pages

StartingPage

EndingPage

Date of Issue

2023/01

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

ISSN

DOI

DOI:10.1096/fj.202201591R

NAID

PMID

URL

J-GLOBAL ID

arXiv ID

ORCID Put Code

DBLP ID