학술논문

Ligand binding to somatostatin receptors induces receptor-specific oligomer formation in live cells
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 99(5)
Subject
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Animals
CHO Cells
Cricetinae
Fluorescent Dyes
Ligands
Oligopeptides
Protein Binding
Receptors
Somatostatin
Spectrometry
Fluorescence
Language
Abstract
Heptahelical receptors (HHRs) are generally thought to function as monomeric entities. Several HHRs such as somatostatin receptors (SSTRs), however, form homo- and heterooligomers when activated by ligand binding. By using dual fluorescent ligands simultaneously applied to live cells monotransfected with SSTR5 (R5) or SSTR1 (R1), or cotransfected with R5 and R1, we have analyzed the ligand receptor stoichiometry and aggregation states for the three receptor systems by fluorescence resonance energy transfer and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Both homo- and heterooligomeric receptors are occupied by two ligand molecules. We find that monomeric, homooligomeric, and heterooligomeric receptor species occur in the same cell cotransfected with two SSTRs, and that oligomerization of SSTRs is regulated by ligand binding by a selective process that is restricted to some (R5) but not other (R1) SSTR subtypes. We propose that induction by ligand of different oligomeric states of SSTRs represents a unique mechanism for generating signaling specificity not only within the SSTR family but more generally in the HHR family.