抑制素介导的信号传导:有争议吗?

Vsevolod V Gurevich, Eugenia V Gurevich
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引用次数: 37

摘要

有丝分裂原活化蛋白(MAP)激酶胞外信号调节激酶(ERK)1/2的激活传统上被用作G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)通过阻滞蛋白信号传导的读数,而不是通过G蛋白信号传导的传统GPCR信号传导。最近的几项研究使用HEK293细胞,其中所有G蛋白都被基因切除或灭活,或者两个非视觉抑制蛋白都被敲除,表明ERK1/2磷酸化需要G蛋白活性,但不一定需要非视觉抑制蛋白的存在。这似乎与流行的范式相矛盾。在这里,我们讨论这些结果以及基因编辑细胞和抑制素介导的信号传导的最新数据。我们认为没有真正的争议。G蛋白可能参与了上游大部分MAP3K的激活,尽管在体内大多数MAP3K的激活是独立于异源三聚体G蛋白的,由受体酪氨酸激酶和/或整合素启动。就MAP激酶而言,最确定的阻滞作用是三层级联的支架(MAP3K-MAP2K-MAPK)。因此,似乎gpcr结合的和自由的阻滞蛋白促进了这些级联中的信号传播,而通过MAP3K激活的信号起始可能独立于阻滞蛋白。不同的map3k被不同的输入激活,其中一些是由G蛋白介导的,特别是在细胞培养中,我们人为地阻止受体酪氨酸激酶和整合素的信号传导,从而有利于gpcr诱导的信号传导。因此,没有理由改变范式:阻滞蛋白和G蛋白在细胞信号传导中发挥不同的非重叠作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Arrestin-mediated signaling: Is there a controversy?

The activation of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 was traditionally used as a readout of signaling of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) via arrestins, as opposed to conventional GPCR signaling via G proteins. Several recent studies using HEK293 cells where all G proteins were genetically ablated or inactivated, or both non-visual arrestins were knocked out, demonstrated that ERK1/2 phosphorylation requires G protein activity, but does not necessarily require the presence of non-visual arrestins. This appears to contradict the prevailing paradigm. Here we discuss these results along with the recent data on gene edited cells and arrestin-mediated signaling. We suggest that there is no real controversy. G proteins might be involved in the activation of the upstream-most MAP3Ks, although in vivo most MAP3K activation is independent of heterotrimeric G proteins, being initiated by receptor tyrosine kinases and/or integrins. As far as MAP kinases are concerned, the best-established role of arrestins is scaffolding of the three-tiered cascades (MAP3K-MAP2K-MAPK). Thus, it seems likely that arrestins, GPCR-bound and free, facilitate the propagation of signals in these cascades, whereas signal initiation via MAP3K activation may be independent of arrestins. Different MAP3Ks are activated by various inputs, some of which are mediated by G proteins, particularly in cell culture, where we artificially prevent signaling by receptor tyrosine kinases and integrins, thereby favoring GPCR-induced signaling. Thus, there is no reason to change the paradigm: Arrestins and G proteins play distinct non-overlapping roles in cell signaling.

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