학술논문

Caveolae are required for protease-selective signaling by protease-activated receptor-1
Document Type
Report
Author abstract
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States. April 14, 2009, Vol. 106 Issue 15, p6393, 5 p.
Subject
United States
Language
English
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
Protease-activated receptor-1 ([PAR.sub.1]) is a G-protein-coupled receptor uniquely activated by proteolysis. Thrombin, a coagulant protease, induces inflammatory responses and endothelial barrier permeability through the activation of [PAR.sub.1]. Activated protein C (APC), an anti-coagulant protease, also activates [PAR.sub.1]. However, unlike thrombin, APC elicits anti-inflammatory responses and protects against endothelial barrier dysfunction induced by thrombin. We found that thrombin and APC signaling were lost in [PAR.sub.1]-deficient endothelial cells, indicating that [PAR.sub.1] is the major effector of protease signaling. To delineate the mechanism responsible for protease-selective signaling by [PAR.sub.1], we examined the effect of APC and thrombin on the activation of RhoA and Rac1, small GTPases that differentially regulate endothelial barrier permeability. Thrombin caused robust RhoA signaling but not Rac1 activation, whereas APC stimulated a marked increase in Rac1 activation but not RhoA signaling, consistent with the opposing functions of these proteases on endothelial barrier integrity. Strikingly, APC signaling and endothelial barrier protection effects were abolished in cells lacking caveolin-1, whereas thrombin signaling remained intact. These findings suggest that compartmentalization of [PAR.sub.1] in caveolae is critical for APC selective signaling to Rac1 activation and endothelial barrier protection. We further report that APC induces [PAR.sub.1] phosphorylation and desensitizes endothelial cells to thrombin signaling but promotes limited receptor cleavage and negligible internalization and degradation even after prolonged APC exposure. Thus, APC selective signaling and endothelial barrier protective effects are mediated through compartmentalization of [PAR.sub.1] in caveolae and a novel mechanism of [PAR.sub.1] signal regulation. APC | endothelial | GPCR | Rac1 | thrombin