4.6 Article

Reengineering the Collision Coupling and Diffusion Mode of the A2A-adenosine Receptor PALMITOYLATION IN HELIX 8 RELIEVES CONFINEMENT

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 287, Issue 50, Pages 42104-42118

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M112.393579

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ph.D. Program Cell Communication in Health and Disease
  2. Austrian Science Fund/Fonds zur Forderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF) [P20012, PIRG-GA-2008-230970]
  3. European Union
  4. Medical University of Vienna
  5. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P 21002] Funding Source: researchfish

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The A(2A)-adenosine receptor undergoes restricted collision coupling with its cognate G protein G(s) and lacks a palmitoylation site at the end of helix 8 in its intracellular C terminus. We explored the hypothesis that there was a causal link between the absence of a palmitoyl moiety and restricted collision coupling by introducing a palmitoylation site. The resulting mutant A(2A)-R309C receptor underwent palmitoylation as verified by both mass spectrometry and metabolic labeling. In contrast to the wild type A(2A) receptor, the concentration-response curve for agonist-induced cAMP accumulation was shifted to the left with increasing expression levels receptor, an observation consistent with collision coupling. Single particle tracking of quantum dot-labeled receptors confirmed that wild type and mutant A(2A) receptor differed in diffusivity and diffusion mode; agonist activation resulted in a decline in mean square displacement of both receptors, but the drop was substantially more pronounced for the wild type receptor. In addition, in the agonist- bound state, the wild type receptor was frequently subject to confinement events (estimated radius 110 nm). These were rarely seen with the palmitoylated A(2A)-R309C receptor, the preferred diffusion mode of which was a random walk in both the basal and the agonist-activated state. Taken together, the observations link restricted collision coupling to diffusion limits imposed by the absence of a palmitoyl moiety in the C terminus of the A(2A) receptor. The experiments allowed for visualizing local confinement of an agonist-activated G protein- coupled receptor in an area consistent with the dimensions of a lipid raft.

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