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Vol. 54, Issue 5, 889-898, November 1998

Role of Receptor and Protein Kinase C Activation in the Internalization of the Gastrin-Releasing Peptide Receptor

Barbara Y. Williams,1 Stéphane B. Dion,2 and Agnes Schonbrunn

Department of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas 77225

The mechanisms regulating receptor internalization are not well understood and vary among different G protein-coupled receptors. The bombesin (Bn)/gastrin-releasing peptide receptor GRP-R, which is coupled to phospholipase C via the Gq family of transducing proteins, is internalized rapidly after Bn binding. Agonist stimulation leads to rapid receptor phosphorylation, as does activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA). However, agonist- and PMA-induced phosphorylation occur at different receptor sites. Here, we examined the role of PKC in GRP-R internalization after agonist and antagonist binding. We synthesized [D-Tyr6]Bn(6-13)propylamide ([D-Tyr6]Bn(6-13)PA) and found that it potently inhibited Bn-stimulated insulin release and [125I-Tyr4]Bn binding (Ki = 4.72 nM) in the HIT-T15 pancreatic cell line. The radiolabeled antagonist peptide, [125I-D-Tyr6]Bn(6-13)PA, bound with high affinity (KD = 0.29 nM at 4°) to a single class of receptor sites, and competition binding studies exhibited the analog specificity expected for the GRP-R subtype. Although the agonist [125I-Tyr4]Bn was internalized rapidly at 37° and subsequently degraded, [125I-D-Tyr6]Bn(6-13)PA was not internalized and was released into the medium mainly as intact peptide. The lysosomal inhibitor chloroquine (200 µM) increased the intracellular accumulation of [125I-Tyr4]Bn but had no effect on the subcellular distribution of [125I-D-Tyr6]Bn(6-13)PA. Consistent with these observations, the treatment of cells with 100 nM Bn at 37° reduced cell surface receptors within minutes, whereas [D-Tyr6]Bn(6-13)PA had no effect. The addition of PMA did not induce the internalization of antagonist-occupied receptors, but pharmacological inhibition of PKC decreased the rate of agonist-induced receptor internalization. These results therefore demonstrate that although PKC contributes to agonist-induced internalization of the GRP-R, it does not elicit receptor internalization of the antagonist-occupied receptor.


Copyright © 1998 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



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