Key phosphorylation sites in GPCR s orchestrate the contribution of β‐Arrestin 1 in ERK 1/2 activation

Baidya, Mithu ; Kumari, Punita ; Dwivedi‐Agnihotri, Hemlata ; Pandey, Shubhi ; Chaturvedi, Madhu ; Stepniewski, Tomasz Maciej ; Kawakami, Kouki ; Cao, Yubo ; Laporte, Stéphane A ; Selent, Jana ; Inoue, Asuka ; Shukla, Arun K (2020) Key phosphorylation sites in GPCR s orchestrate the contribution of β‐Arrestin 1 in ERK 1/2 activation EMBO reports, 21 (9). ISSN 1469-221X

[img] PDF
4MB

Official URL: http://doi.org/10.15252/embr.201949886

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.15252/embr.201949886

Abstract

β‐arrestins (βarrs) are key regulators of G protein‐coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling and trafficking, and their knockdown typically leads to a decrease in agonist‐induced ERK1/2 MAP kinase activation. Interestingly, for some GPCRs, knockdown of βarr1 augments agonist‐induced ERK1/2 phosphorylation although a mechanistic basis for this intriguing phenomenon is unclear. Here, we use selected GPCRs to explore a possible correlation between the spatial positioning of receptor phosphorylation sites and the contribution of βarr1 in ERK1/2 activation. We discover that engineering a spatially positioned double‐phosphorylation‐site cluster in the bradykinin receptor (B2R), analogous to that present in the vasopressin receptor (V2R), reverses the contribution of βarr1 in ERK1/2 activation from inhibitory to promotive. An intrabody sensor suggests a conformational mechanism for this role reversal of βarr1, and molecular dynamics simulation reveals a bifurcated salt bridge between this double‐phosphorylation site cluster and Lys294 in the lariat loop of βarr1, which directs the orientation of the lariat loop. Our findings provide novel insights into the opposite roles of βarr1 in ERK1/2 activation for different GPCRs with a direct relevance to biased agonism and novel therapeutics.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to The European Molecular Biology Organization
Keywords:ERK1/2 MAP kinase; G protein-coupled receptors; biased agonism; cellular signaling; β-arrestins
ID Code:126371
Deposited On:13 Oct 2022 05:57
Last Modified:13 Oct 2022 05:57

Repository Staff Only: item control page