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Journal Article

Residency time of agonists does not affect the stability of GPCR-arrestin complexes

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Pohle,  Lisa-Marie
Max Planck Research Group Pain Perception, MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Mösslein, N., Pohle, L.-M., Fuss, A., Bünemann, M., & Krasel, C. (2022). Residency time of agonists does not affect the stability of GPCR-arrestin complexes. British Journal of Pharmacology, 179(16), 4107-4116. doi:10.1111/bph.15846.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000A-66F5-F
Abstract
Background and purpose: The interaction of arrestins with G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) desensitizes agonist-dependent receptor responses and often leads to receptor internalization. GPCRs that internalize without arrestin have been classified as "class A" GPCRs whereas "class B" GPCRs co-internalize with arrestin into endosomes. The interaction of arrestins with GPCRs requires both agonist activation and receptor phosphorylation. Here, we ask the question whether agonists with very slow off-rates can cause the formation of particularly stable receptor-arrestin complexes.



Experimental approach: The stability of GPCR-arrestin-3 complexes at two class A GPCRs, the β2 -adrenoceptor and the μ opioid receptor, was assessed using two different techniques, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) employing several ligands with very different off-rates. Arrestin trafficking was determined by confocal microscopy.

Key results: Upon agonist washout, GPCR-arrestin-3 complexes showed markedly different dissociation rates in single-cell FRET experiments. In FRAP experiments, however, all full agonists led to the formation of receptor-arrestin complexes of identical stability whereas the complex between the μ receptor and arrestin-3 induced by the partial agonist morphine was less stable. Agonists with very slow off-rates could not mediate the co-internalization of arrestin-3 with class A GPCRs into endosomes.

Conclusions and implications: Agonist off-rates do not affect the stability of GPCR-arrestin complexes but phosphorylation patterns do. Our results imply that orthosteric agonists are not able to pharmacologically convert class A into class B GPCRs.