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Volume 270,
Number 7,
Issue of February 17, 1995 pp. 3346-3352
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Chronic
Desensitization and Down-regulation of the Gastrin-releasing Peptide
Receptor Are Mediated by a Protein Kinase C-dependent Mechanism
(Received for publication, August 3, 1994; and in revised form, November 4, 1994)
Richard V.
Benya
,
Takashi
Kusui
,
James
F.
Battey
,
Robert T.
Jensen
The cellular basis of down-regulation and desensitization in
phospholipase C-linked receptors is unclear. Recent studies with some
receptors suggest that elements in the carboxyl terminus of the
receptor are important in mediating these processes. Three mutant
gastrin-releasing peptide receptors (GRP-R) were studied: one whose
last 37 carboxyl-terminal amino acids were eliminated (construct
MGT346); one that replaced all of the carboxyl-terminal Ser and Thr
eliminated in MGT346 with Ala, Asn, or Gly (construct JF1); and one
that selectively replaced the Ser and Thr of the protein kinase C
consensus sequence (PKC-CS) located within the same region with alanine
(construct TS360AA). Desensitization was assessed by measuring the
ability to activate phospholipase C and increase cellular
[ H]inositol phosphates, or increase
[Ca ] , after
pre-exposure to 3 nM bombesin for 24 h. Wild-type GRP-R was
maximally desensitized and down-regulated after a 24-h exposure to 3
nM bombesin, and removal of the PKC-CS alone markedly
attenuated each process. Elimination of additional serines and
threonines by truncation (MGT346) or replacement (JF1) did not decrease
down-regulation or desensitization further. To confirm the necessity of
second messenger activation in mediating down-regulation, we further
investigated two additional mutant GRP-R that bound agonist with high
affinity but fail to activate phospholipase C (constructs R139G and
A263E). Neither construct underwent significant down-regulation.
Removal of all GRP-R carboxyl-terminal Ser or Thr, either by MGT346 or
JF1, reduced internalization by >80%, whereas elimination of the
PKC-CS in TS360AA only attenuated internalization by 21 ± 2%.
These data suggest that activation of the distal carboxyl-terminal
PKC-CS is essential for chronic desensitization and down-regulation of
the GRP-R, and provide no evidence for involvement of second
messenger-independent processes. In contrast, internalization is
equally regulated by both second messenger-dependent and independent
processes.

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Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
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