G-protein system
[WG21:p34-35; RD5:p26-45]
- G-protein system allows the transduction and amplication of the original signal
Structure
- G protein coupled receptors (GPCR) has a single polypeptide that has 7 transmembrane alpha-helical segments
* Ligand-binding site is extracellular
- G proteins are heterotrimers
* 3 subunits (alpha, beta, gamma)
- Gs = Activate adenylate cyclase --> mostly stimulatory effects
- Gi = Inhibit adenylate cyclase --> mostly inhibitory effect
- Gt = Photoreception in the eyes
- Gq = Phospholipase C regulation
Mechanism
- A ligand binds to GPCR in the cell membrane
- Binding causes G-protein to become activated
- Alpha subunit release GDP and binds to GTP instead, and GTP-alpha complex separate from beta-gamma complex
- GTP-alpha complex interacts with effector proteins
- GTP becomes hydrolysed (by the intrinsic GTPase activity of the alpha subunit)
- GDP-alpha re-unite with beta-gamma complex
NB:
- Beta-gamma complex may exert actions on their own
* But require higher receptor occupancy for this effect to manifest
* [RD5:p34]
Examples
- Adrenergic receptors
- Dopamine receptors
- Adenosine receptors
- Most 5HT receptors
* Except for 5HT3
- Muscarinic ACh receptors
- Cholera toxin acts on Gs protein
--> Persistent activation
--> Excessive secretion of fluids
Targets for G-proteins
[RD5:p36-39]
Main targets for G-proteins:
- Adenylate cyclase
--> Responsible for cAMP formation
- Phospholipase C
--> Responsible for inositol phosphate (IP) and diacylglycerol (DAG) formation
- Ion channels
* Especially Ca2+ and K+ channels
- Phospholipase A [RD5:p41]
* Arachidonic acid and eicosanoids formation
Adenylate cyclase
- Adenylate cyclase is
* Membrane bound
* Synthesize cAMP (a nucleotide) from ATP
* Activated by Gs, inhibited by Gi protein
- Examples [WG21:p99,p112; RD5:p139]
* Dopamine receptors (D1,D5 = Gs; D2-4=Gi)
* Alpha2 adrenergic receptors (Gi)
* Beta adrenergic receptors (Gs)
* Adenosine receptors (A1=Gi; A2=Gs)
* Muscarinic ACh receptors M2, M4 (Gi)
* 5-HT1 and 5-HT4 receptors (5-HT1 = Gi; 5-HT4 = Gs)
* GABAb receptor (Gi)
cAMP
- cAMP activates protein kinases
--> Protein kinases catalyse phosphorylation of enzymes or ion channels
--> Activation or inhibition of these enzymes or ion channels
--> Various effects
- Examples of cAMP actions (via protein kinases)
* Phosphorylation of voltage-activated calcium channel in heart --> Increase Ca2+ flow --> Increased contractility
* Phosphorylation of myosin-light-chain kinase in smooth muscles --> Inactivation --> Smooth muscle relaxation
- cAMP is hydrolysed by phosphodiesterase
- Phosphodiesterase can be inhibited by drugs such as
* Methylxanthines (theophylline, caffeine)
* Sildenafil (aka Viagra)
Phospholipase C / inositol phosphate system
- Activation of G-protein-coupled receptor
--> Phospholipase C is activated
- Phospholipase C
* Membrane-bound
* Catalyses phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) ===> diacylglycerol (DAG) + inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)
- Examples [WG21:p99; RD5:p139]
* Muscarinic ACh receptors M1, M3, M5
* Alpha1 adrenergic receptors
* 5-HT2 receptors
* GABAb receptors
Diacylglycerol (DAG)
- Activate a membrane-bound protein kinase, protein kinase C (PKC)
- Highly lipophilic and remains within the membrane (unlike IP3)
- DAG is later phosphorylated
--> Phosphatidic acid
Protein kinase C (PKC)
- There are 12 subtypes of PKC
- Most are activated by DAG and raised intracellular Ca2+ level
- Also activated by phorbol esters (a highly irritant and carcinogenic compound)
- One of the subtypes are activated by arachidonic acid
- PKC catalyses the phosphorylation of various intracellular proteins
--> Various effects
Inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)
- Water-soluble
--> Released into the cytosol
- Acts on the IP3 receptor
* Which is a ligand-gated calcium channel on the membrane of endoplasmic reticulum
--> Control the release of Ca2+ from intracellular store
--> Increases free intracellular Ca2+
--> Initiate other events (secretion, contraction, enzyme activation, membrane hyperpolarisation)
- IP3 is later dephosphorylated
--> Inositol
--> Bind with phosphatidic acid (i.e. phosphorylated DAG)
--> PIP2 is formed once again
- Lithium blocks the formation of inositol
Ion channels (as a target of G-protein)
- G-proteins can directly act on ion channels without a secondary message
* Via the action of the free alpha-subunit, or the beta-gamma-subunit complex
- Examples:
* Opiate receptors opening K+ channels
* Muscarinic ACh receptors enhancing K+ permeability
Desensitisation of GPCR
Homologous (agonist-specific) desensitisation
- Agonist binds to receptor --> Activation of the receptor
- Activated receptor becomes phosphorylated by a specific kinase (GRK)
- Phosphorylated receptor binds to arrestin
--> Loss of ability to associate with G-protein (loss of G-protein coupling)
--> Undergoes endocytosis
Heterologous desensitisation
- Phosphorylation of the receptor is by protein kinases which were activated by another type of receptors