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Helix 8 of leukotriene B4type‐2 receptor is required for the folding to pass the quality control in the endoplasmic reticulum
27
Citations
46
References
2009
Year
Molecular BiologyCellular PhysiologyLeukotriene B4type‐2 ReceptorProtein FoldingSecretory PathwayCell SignalingProtein Quality ControlProtein FunctionBiochemistryG Protein-coupled ReceptorQuality ControlCell BiologySignal TransductionHelix 8Natural SciencesFunctional SelectivityHblt2 PlaysIntracellular TraffickingCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Many G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) possess a putative cytoplasmic helical domain, termed helix 8 (H8), at the proximal region of the C-terminal tail. However, the significance of this domain is not fully understood. Here, we demonstrate the requirement of H8 for the proper folding of GPCRs for passage through the quality control in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In the human leukotriene B(4) type-2 receptor (hBLT2), lack of H8 led to an accumulation of the receptor (hBLT2/DeltaH8) in the ER. Similar results were obtained in two representative human GPCRs, dopamine type-1 and lysophosphatidic acid type-2 receptors, which were engineered to lack H8. Treatment with the several ligands, which act as pharmacological chaperones, facilitated the surface expression of hBLT2/DeltaH8. The surface-trafficked hBLT2/DeltaH8 exhibited an agonist-evoked increase in Ca(2+), demonstrating that H8 is not critical for ligand binding and activation of coupled G proteins. Thus, these results suggest that the H8 region of hBLT2 plays an important role in transport-competent receptor folding.
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