Ramsay, Douglas Francis (2002) Resonance energy transfer based detection of G-protein coupled receptor dimerization. PhD thesis, University of Glasgow.
Full text available as:
PDF (scanned version of the original print thesis. Edited version, 3rd party copyright removed)
Download (11MB) |
Abstract
Over the past decade there has been a growing body of evidence, obtained from studies employing a wide variety of pharmacological, biochemical and biophysical techniques, suggesting that G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) exist not as monomeric entities but rather as dimers or other higher order oligomeric arrays. To further the accumulation of knowledge pertaining to this research area, the work presented in this thesis has made use of one such particular biophysical technique called bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET). In order to utilise this system GPCRs were modified at their carboxyl terminal tail with either the anthozoan enzyme Renilla luciferase or the fluorescent protein eYPP. Through this expedient, if the differentially tagged GPCRs are in close proximity when co-expressed within mammalian cells, upon addition of the bioluminescent molecule coelenterazine, there is a non-radiative exchange of energy between the Renilla and eYFP, resulting in a fluorescent emission from eYFP. The technique can be used to monitor interactions in real time, in living cells and does not require any biochemical manipulations/treatments such as are associated with more traditional approaches to this line of enquiry (e.g. co-immunoprecipitation). Using this technique, it was demonstrated that the β2-AR was closely associated when expressed within HEK 293T cells, as were the σ-opioid and K-opioid receptors since all gave robust signals in energy transfer experiments. Contrary to some previous reports however, it was not seen to be the case that the presence of ligand was capable of modulating the magnitude of the energy transfer signal. This indicated that for these GPCRs the binding of ligand did not result in any alteration in the dimerization status of the receptor. It was further shown, through monitoring the energy transfer at varying levels of receptor expression, that energy transfer was favourable between homomers of the K-opioid receptor. At similar receptor densities, energy transfer between coexpressed K-opioid receptor and TRHr was seen to be considerably less favourable, requiring far higher receptor expression levels to be achieved before meaningful levels of energy transfer could be detected. These results strongly indicated that closely related GPCR types had a greater propensity for mutual interaction than did more distantly related ones. Many of these results were confirmed using a modified version of BRET, designated BRET2, which conferred an additional sensitivity to detection of protein-protein interactions. Using BRET2 a previously ill-defined result obtained with traditional BRET, that suggested that the β2-AR might interact with the 6-opioid-receptor, was confirmed. An additional purpose of the work described herein was to explore the potential of GPCR dimerization as a means of providing a novel ligand detection assay suitable for application to industrial high-throughput screening programmes. Since the experiments concentrating on GPCR oligomerization failed to provide such an assay, it was decided that the ability of GPCRs to recruit β-arrestin as part of the process of desensitisation should be evaluated as a possible alternative. Using a cell line stably expressing the GPCR CCR2 the ability of this receptor to recruit various fluorescent proteins conjugated to β-arrestin2 (β-arrestin-red NFP and β-arrestin-cyan NFP) from the cytosol in response to receptor activation was demonstrated. The β-arrestin2 was localized into endocytic vesicles and remained tightly associated with the internalised receptors after sequestration had occurred. This behaviour was in accordance with other previous reports for GPCRs that, like CCR2, possessed serine and threonine clusters within their carboxyl terminal tails. If adapted to a FRET based format this particular protein-protein interaction could form the basis of a ligand screening method for agonists that would be equally applicable to most GPCRs. It was further shown that β-arrestin2-red NFP had a higher affinity for CCR2 than did β-arrestin1- GFP through the monitoring of the respective kinetics and extent of translocation when the constructs were co-expressed within the same cells. As an alternative strategy for the detection of ligands, a constitutively active mutant of β 2-AR (CAM β 2-AR) was modified C-terminally with the bioluminescent enzyme Renilla luciferase. This CAM 2-AR was structurally destabilized to a high degree so that only modest expression levels could be obtained upon expression of the Renilla modified receptor construct (CAM β 2-AR-Rluc) in HEK 293T cells. Upon prolonged exposure to various antagonist ligands, a two to three fold upregulation of the receptor construct could be detected via light output from the luciferase. From parallel competition binding experiments it was also demonstrated that, for each of these ligands, the EC50 for upregulation highly correlated with the dissociation equilibrium constant (Ki). This strongly indicated that it was the presence of the ligand within the receptor binding pocket that alone accounted for the observed upregulation effects. In a similar manner, it was demonstrated that agonist compounds were also capable of mediating a similar degree of upregulation. The increase in receptor density of CAM β2-AR in response to the presence of ligand was subsequently shown to be dependent on the constitutively active nature of the receptor. In an additional experiment co-transfection of CAM β 2-AR-Rluc along with a GFP conjugated version of the βib- adrenoceptor into HEK 293T cells and subsequent monitoring of the upregulation of either construct in response to selective ligands confirmed the necessity for pharmacological specificity in mediating the upregulatory effect. Finally, to show that this assay method would be suitable as a means of detecting ligands in a high- throughput screening format, the ability of β2-AR to be upregulated was assessed in the presence of a wide variety of compounds, only a proportion of which possessed pharmacological specificity for the β2-AR. When tested in this manner it was seen that only compounds that were specific for β2-AR were capable of mediating an upregulatory effect.
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
---|---|
Qualification Level: | Doctoral |
Keywords: | G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET). |
Subjects: | Q Science > QH Natural history > QH345 Biochemistry |
Colleges/Schools: | College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences |
Supervisor's Name: | Graeme, Prof. Milligan |
Date of Award: | 2002 |
Depositing User: | Mrs Monika Milewska-Fiertek |
Unique ID: | glathesis:2002-30854 |
Copyright: | Copyright of this thesis is held by the author. |
Date Deposited: | 04 Oct 2018 11:48 |
Last Modified: | 08 Aug 2022 08:06 |
Thesis DOI: | 10.5525/gla.thesis.30854 |
URI: | https://theses.gla.ac.uk/id/eprint/30854 |
Related URLs: |
Actions (login required)
View Item |
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year