학술논문

Phosphoproteomic analysis of protease-activated receptor-1 biased signaling reveals unique modulators of endothelial barrier function
Document Type
article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 117(9)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Hematology
HIV/AIDS
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Calmodulin-Binding Proteins
Carrier Proteins
Endothelial Cells
Humans
Microfilament Proteins
Phosphorylation
Protein C Inhibitor
Proteomics
Receptor
PAR-1
Signal Transduction
Thrombin
actin
arrestin
GPCR
inflammation
thrombin
Language
Abstract
Thrombin, a procoagulant protease, cleaves and activates protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) to promote inflammatory responses and endothelial dysfunction. In contrast, activated protein C (APC), an anticoagulant protease, activates PAR1 through a distinct cleavage site and promotes anti-inflammatory responses, prosurvival, and endothelial barrier stabilization. The distinct tethered ligands formed through cleavage of PAR1 by thrombin versus APC result in unique active receptor conformations that bias PAR1 signaling. Despite progress in understanding PAR1 biased signaling, the proteins and pathways utilized by thrombin versus APC signaling to induce opposing cellular functions are largely unknown. Here, we report the global phosphoproteome induced by thrombin and APC signaling in endothelial cells with the quantification of 11,266 unique phosphopeptides using multiplexed quantitative mass spectrometry. Our results reveal unique dynamic phosphoproteome profiles of thrombin and APC signaling, an enrichment of associated biological functions, including key modulators of endothelial barrier function, regulators of gene transcription, and specific kinases predicted to mediate PAR1 biased signaling. Using small interfering RNA to deplete a subset of phosphorylated proteins not previously linked to thrombin or APC signaling, a function for afadin and adducin-1 actin binding proteins in thrombin-induced endothelial barrier disruption is unveiled. Afadin depletion resulted in enhanced thrombin-promoted barrier permeability, whereas adducin-1 depletion completely ablated thrombin-induced barrier disruption without compromising p38 signaling. However, loss of adducin-1 blocked APC-induced Akt signaling. These studies define distinct thrombin and APC dynamic signaling profiles and a rich array of proteins and biological pathways that engender PAR1 biased signaling in endothelial cells.