GPCR and CAMP

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 5

832 Chapter 15: Cell Signaling

SIGNALING THROUGH G-PROTEIN-COUPLED


RECEPTORS
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) form the largest family of cell-surface
receptors, and they mediate most responses to signals from the external world, as
well as signals from other cells, including hormones, neurotransmitters, and local
mediators. Our senses of sight, smell, and taste depend on them. There are more
than 800 GPCRs in humans, and in mice there are about 1000 concerned with
the sense of smell alone. The signal molecules that act on GPCRs are as varied in
structure as they are in function and include proteins and small peptides, as well
as derivatives of amino acids and fatty acids, not to mention photons of light and
all the molecules that we can smell or taste. The same signal molecule can activate
many different GPCR family members; for example, adrenaline activates at least
9 distinct GPCRs, acetylcholine another 5, and the neurotransmitter serotonin at
least 14. The different receptors for the same signal are usually expressed in differ-
ent cell types and elicit different responses. EXTRACELLULAR
Despite the chemical and functional diversity of the signal molecules that acti- SPACE
vate them, all GPCRs have a similar structure. They consist of a single polypeptide
chain that threads back and forth across the lipid bilayer seven times, forming a
cylindrical structure, often with a deep ligand-binding site at its center (Figure
1521). In addition to their characteristic orientation in the plasma membrane,
they all use G proteins to relay the signal into the cell interior. CYTOSOL
The GPCR superfamily includes rhodopsin, the light-activated protein in the plasma
membrane
vertebrate eye, as well as the large number of olfactory receptors in the vertebrate
nose. Other family members are found in unicellular organisms: the receptors in (A)
yeasts that recognize secreted mating factors are an example. It is likely that the
GPCRs that mediate cellcell signaling in multicellular organisms evolved from
the sensory receptors in their unicellular eukaryotic ancestors.
It is remarkable that almost half of all known drugs work through GPCRs or the
signaling pathways GPCRs activate. Of the many hundreds of genes in the human
genome that encode GPCRs, about 150 encode orphan receptors, for which the
ligand is unknown. Many of them are likely targets for new drugs that remain to
be discovered.

Trimeric G Proteins Relay Signals From GPCRs


When an extracellular signal molecule binds to a GPCR, the receptor undergoes
a conformational change that enables it to activate a trimeric GTP-binding pro-
tein (G protein), which couples the receptor to enzymes or ion channels in the
membrane. In some cases, the G protein is physically associated with the recep-
tor before the receptor is activated, whereas in others it binds only after receptor
activation. There are various types of G proteins, each specific for a particular set
of GPCRs and for a particular set of target proteins in the plasma membrane. They (B)
all have a similar structure, however, and operate similarly.
G proteins are composed of three protein subunits, , and . In the unstim- Figure 1521 A G-protein-coupled
ulated state, the subunit has GDP bound and the G protein is inactive (Figure receptor (GPCR). (A) GPCRs that bind
small ligands such as adrenaline have
1522). When a GPCR is activated, it acts like a guanine nucleotide exchange fac-
small extracellular domains, and the ligand
tor (GEF) and induces the subunit to release its bound GDP, allowing GTP to usually binds deep within the plane of
bind in its place. GTP binding then causes an activating conformational change in the membrane to a site that is formed by
the G subunit, releasing the G protein from the receptor and triggering dissocia- amino acids from several transmembrane
tion of the GTP-bound G subunit from the G pairboth of which then interact segments. GPCRs that bind protein
with various targets, such as enzymes and ion channels in the plasma membrane, ligands have am15.30/15.21
MBoC6 large extracellular domain
(not shown here) that contributes to
which relay the signal onward (Figure 1523). ligand binding. (B) The structure of the
The subunit is a GTPase and becomes inactive when it hydrolyzes its bound 2-adrenergic receptor, a receptor for the
GTP to GDP. The time required for GTP hydrolysis is usually short because the neurotransmitter adrenaline, illustrates the
GTPase activity is greatly enhanced by the binding of the subunit to a second typical cylindrical arrangement of the seven
protein, which can be either the target protein or a specific regulator of G pro- transmembrane helices in a GPCR. The
ligand (orange) binds in a pocket between
tein signaling (RGS). RGS proteins act as -subunit-specific GTPase-activating the helices, resulting in conformational
proteins (GAPs) (see Figure 158), and they help shut off G-protein-mediated changes on the cytoplasmic surface of the
responses in all eukaryotes. There are about 25 RGS proteins encoded in the receptor that promote G-protein activation
human genome, each of which interacts with a particular set of G proteins. (not shown). (PDB code: 3P0G.)
SIGNALING THROUGH G-PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORS 833

plasma membrane Figure 1522 The structure of an inactive


G protein. (A) Note that both the and the
GDP-binding subunits have covalently attached lipid
site molecules (red tails) that help bind them to
the plasma membrane, and the subunit
CYTOSOL
has GDP bound. (B) The three-dimensional
structure of the inactive, GDP-bound form


of a G protein called Gs, which interacts
GDP
with numerous GPCRs, including the

2-adrenergic receptor shown in Figures
Ras 1521 and 1523. The subunit contains
domain
the GTPase domain and binds to one side
AH domain
(A) of the subunit. The subunit binds to
the opposite side of the subunit, and the

(B) and subunits together form a single
functional unit. The GTPase domain of the
subunit contains two major subdomains:
Some G Proteins Regulate the Production of Cyclic AMP the Ras domain, which is related to other
GTPases and provides one face of the
Cyclic AMP (cAMP) acts as a second messenger in some signaling pathways. nucleotide-binding pocket; and the alpha-
An extracellular signal can increase cAMP concentration more than twentyfold helical or AH domain, which clamps the
nucleotide in place. (B, based on
in seconds (Figure 1524). As explained earlier (see Figure 1514), such a rapid D.G. Lombright et al., Nature 379:311
response requires balancing a rapid synthesis of the molecule with its rapid 319, 1996. With permission from Macmillan
breakdown or removal. Cyclic AMP is synthesized from ATP by an enzyme called Publishers Ltd.)

plasma membrane

MBoC6 m15.31/15.22

CYTOSOL

inactive GPCR

GDP

signal molecule inactive G protein

activated GPCR

Ras domain

Figure 1523 Activation of a G protein


AH domain
by an activated GPCR. Binding of an
GDP extracellular signal molecule to a GPCR
changes the conformation of the receptor,
which allows the receptor to bind and
GTP
alter the conformation of a trimeric
G protein. The AH domain of the G protein
subunit moves outward to open the
nucleotide-binding site, thereby promoting
dissociation of GDP. GTP binding then
promotes closure of the nucleotide-binding
site, triggering conformational changes that
cause dissociation of the subunit from
the receptor and from the complex. The
GTP GTP-bound subunit and the complex
activated each regulate the activities of downstream
subunit activated
signaling molecules (not shown). The
subunit receptor stays active while the extracellular
signal molecule is bound to it, and it can
therefore catalyze the activation of many
effector activation
G-protein molecules (Movie 15.1).

MBoC6 m15.32/15.23
834 Chapter 15: Cell Signaling

time 0 sec time 20 sec Figure 1524 An increase in cyclic AMP


in response to an extracellular signal.
This nerve cell in culture is responding to
the neurotransmitter serotonin, which acts
through a GPCR to cause a rapid rise in
+ serotonin
the intracellular concentration of cyclic
AMP. To monitor the cyclic AMP level, the
cell has been loaded with a fluorescent
protein that changes its fluorescence when
it binds cyclic AMP. Blue indicates a low
level of cyclic AMP, yellow an intermediate
level, and red a high level. (A) In the resting
cell, the cyclic AMP level is about 5 108
(A) (B) M. (B) Twenty seconds after the addition
20 m
of serotonin to the culture medium,
the intracellular level of cyclic AMP has
adenylyl cyclase, and it is rapidly and continuously destroyed by cyclic AMP increased to more than 106 M in the
relevant parts of the cell, an increase of
phosphodiesterases (Figure 1525). Adenylyl cyclase is a large, multipass trans- more than twentyfold. (From B.J. Bacskai
membrane protein with its catalytic domain on the cytosolic side of the plasma et al., Science 260:222226, 1993. With
membrane. There are at least eight isoforms in mammals, most of which are regu- permission from AAAS.)
lated by both G proteins and Ca2+. MBoC6 m15.33/15.24
Many extracellular signals work by increasing cAMP concentrations inside
the cell. These signals activate GPCRs that are coupled to a stimulatory G protein
(Gs). The activated subunit of Gs binds and thereby activates adenylyl cyclase.
Other extracellular signals, acting through different GPCRs, reduce cAMP levels
by activating an inhibitory G protein (Gi), which then inhibits adenylyl cyclase.
Both Gs and Gi are targets for medically important bacterial toxins. Cholera
toxin, which is produced by the bacterium that causes cholera, is an enzyme that
catalyzes the transfer of ADP ribose from intracellular NAD+ to the subunit of
Gs. This ADP ribosylation alters the subunit so that it can no longer hydrolyze its
bound GTP, causing it to remain in an active state that stimulates adenylyl cyclase
indefinitely. The resulting prolonged elevation in cAMP concentration within
intestinal epithelial cells causes a large efflux of Cl and water into the gut, thereby
causing the severe diarrhea that characterizes cholera. Pertussis toxin, which is
made by the bacterium that causes pertussis (whooping cough), catalyzes the NH2
ADP ribosylation of the subunit of Gi, preventing the protein from interacting N
with receptors; as a result, the G protein remains in the inactive GDP-bound state N
and is unable to regulate its target proteins. These two toxins are widely used in O O O
_ N N
experiments to determine whether a cells GPCR-dependent response to a signal O P O P O P O CH2 O
is mediated by Gs or by Gi. _ _ _
O O O ATP
Some of the responses mediated by a Gs-stimulated increase in cAMP concen-
tration are listed in Table 151. As the table shows, different cell types respond
OH OH
differently to an increase in cAMP concentration. Some cell types, such as fat cells, adenylyl
activate adenylyl cyclase in response to multiple hormones, all of which thereby cyclase NH2
stimulate the breakdown of triglyceride (the storage form of fat) to fatty acids. N
N
Individuals with genetic defects in the Gs subunit show decreased responses to P Pi
certain hormones, resulting in metabolic abnormalities, abnormal bone develop- N N
CH2 O
ment, and mental retardation.
O
Cyclic-AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase (PKA) Mediates Most of O cAMP

the Effects of Cyclic AMP _


P O OH
O
In most animal cells, cAMP exerts its effects mainly by activating cyclic-AMP- H2O
dependent protein kinase (PKA). This kinase phosphorylates specific serines or cyclic AMP NH2
phosphodiesterase
N
N
Figure 1525 The synthesis and degradation of cyclic AMP. In a reaction O
catalyzed by the enzyme adenylyl cyclase, cyclic AMP (cAMP) is synthesized _ N N
from ATP through a cyclization reaction that removes two phosphate O P O CH2 O
groups as pyrophosphate (PPi ); a pyrophosphatase drives this synthesis by _
O 5-AMP
hydrolyzing the released pyrophosphate to phosphate (not shown). Cyclic
AMP is short-lived (unstable) in the cell because it is hydrolyzed by specific
phosphodiesterases to form 5-AMP, as indicated. OH OH

MBoC6 m15.34/15.25
SIGNALING THROUGH G-PROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORS 835

TABLE 151 Some Hormone-induced Cell Responses Mediated by Cyclic AMP


Target tissue Hormone Major response
Thyroid gland Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) Thyroid hormone synthesis
and secretion
Adrenal cortex Adrenocorticotrophic hormone Cortisol secretion
(ACTH)
Ovary Luteinizing hormone (LH) Progesterone secretion
Muscle Adrenaline Glycogen breakdown
Bone Parathormone Bone resorption
Heart Adrenaline Increase in heart rate and
force of contraction
Liver Glucagon Glycogen breakdown
Kidney Vasopressin Water resorption
Fat Adrenaline, ACTH, glucagon, TSH Triglyceride breakdown

threonines on selected target proteins, including intracellular signaling proteins


and effector proteins, thereby regulating their activity. The target proteins differ
from one cell type to another, which explains why the effects of cAMP vary so
markedly depending on the cell type (see Table 151).
In the inactive state, PKA consists of a complex of two catalytic subunits and
two regulatory subunits. The binding of cAMP to the regulatory subunits alters
their conformation, causing them to dissociate from the complex. The released
catalytic subunits are thereby activated to phosphorylate specific target proteins
(Figure 1526). The regulatory subunits of PKA (also called A-kinase) are impor-
tant for localizing the kinase inside the cell: special A-kinase anchoring proteins
(AKAPs) bind both to the regulatory subunits and to a component of the cyto-
skeleton or a membrane of an organelle, thereby tethering the enzyme complex
to a particular subcellular compartment. Some AKAPs also bind other signaling
proteins, forming a signaling complex. An AKAP located around the nucleus of
heart muscle cells, for example, binds both PKA and a phosphodiesterase that
hydrolyzes cAMP. In unstimulated cells, the phosphodiesterase keeps the local
cAMP concentration low, so that the bound PKA is inactive; in stimulated cells, Figure 1526 The activation of cyclic-
AMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA).
cAMP concentration rapidly rises, overwhelming the phosphodiesterase and acti- The binding of cAMP to the regulatory
vating the PKA. Among the target proteins that PKA phosphorylates and activates subunits of the PKA tetramer induces a
in these cells is the adjacent phosphodiesterase, which rapidly lowers the cAMP conformational change, causing these
concentration again. This negative feedback arrangement converts what might subunits to dissociate from the catalytic
otherwise be a prolonged PKA response into a brief, local pulse of PKA activity. subunits, thereby activating the kinase
activity of the catalytic subunits. The
Whereas some responses mediated by cAMP occur within seconds (see Figure release of the catalytic subunits requires the
1524), others depend on changes in the transcription of specific genes and take binding of more than two cAMP molecules
hours to develop fully. In cells that secrete the peptide hormone somatostatin, to the regulatory subunits in the tetramer.
This requirement greatly sharpens the
response of the kinase to changes in cAMP
cyclic AMP concentration, as discussed earlier (see
Figure 1516). Mammalian cells have at
least two types of PKAs: type I is mainly in
the cytosol, whereas type II is bound via its
regulatory subunits and special anchoring
inactive proteins to the plasma membrane, nuclear
PKA membrane, mitochondrial outer membrane,
and microtubules. In both types, once the
catalytic subunits are freed and active, they
can migrate into the nucleus (where they
complex of can phosphorylate transcription regulatory
regulatory inactive
subunit catalytic cyclic AMP and active catalytic proteins), while the regulatory subunits
subunit regulatory subunits subunits remain in the cytoplasm.

MBoC6 m15.35/15.26
836 Chapter 15: Cell Signaling

activated Figure 1527 How a rise in intracellular


adenylyl cyclase cyclic AMP concentration can alter
signal molecule activated
gene transcription. The binding of an
subunit of extracellular signal molecule to its GPCR
stimulatory G plasma activates adenylyl cyclase via Gs and
protein (Gs) membrane thereby increases cAMP concentration in
the cytosol. This rise activates PKA, and
the released catalytic subunits of PKA
CYTOSOL can then enter the nucleus, where they
phosphorylate the transcription regulatory
GTP
protein CREB. Once phosphorylated,
activated GPCR CREB recruits the coactivator CBP, which
stimulates gene transcription. In some
ATP cases, at least, the inactive CREB protein is
bound to the cyclic AMP response element
cyclic AMP (CRE) in DNA before it is phosphorylated
(not shown). See Movie 15.2.

inactive PKA
activated
PKA

CYTOSOL

NUCLEUS

nuclear pore
activated PKA

activated, phosphorylated CREB

inactive CREB
CREB-binding P
protein (CBP) activated target gene

cyclic AMP response


element (CRE) GENE TRANSCRIPTION

for example, cAMP activates the gene that encodes this hormone. The regulatory
region of the somatostatin gene contains a short cis-regulatory sequence, called
the cyclic AMP response element (CRE), which is also found in the regulatory
region of many other genes activated by cAMP. A specific transcription regulator
called CRE-binding (CREB) protein recognizes this sequence. When PKA is acti-
vated by cAMP, it phosphorylates CREB on a single serine; phosphorylated CREB
MBoC6 m15.36/15.27
then recruits a transcriptional coactivator called CREB-binding protein (CBP),
which stimulates the transcription of the target genes (Figure 1527). Thus, CREB
can transform a short cAMP signal into a long-term change in a cell, a process
that, in the brain, is thought to play an important part in some forms of learning
and memory.

Some G Proteins Signal Via Phospholipids


Many GPCRs exert their effects through G proteins that activate the plasma-mem-
brane-bound enzyme phospholipase C- (PLC). Table 152 lists some exam-
ples of responses activated in this way. The phospholipase acts on a phosphory-
lated inositol phospholipid (a phosphoinositide) called phosphatidylinositol
4,5-bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P2], which is present in small amounts in the inner half
of the plasma membrane lipid bilayer (Figure 1528). Receptors that activate this
inositol phospholipid signaling pathway mainly do so via a G protein called Gq,
which activates phospholipase C- in much the same way that Gs activates adeny-
lyl cyclase. The activated phospholipase then cleaves the PI(4,5)P2 to generate two

You might also like