C-Terminal Interaction Is Essential for Surface Trafficking But Not for Heteromeric Assembly of GABA<sub>B</sub>Receptors

Adriana Pagano(Novartis (Switzerland)), Giorgio Rovelli(Novartis (Switzerland)), Johannes Mosbacher(Novartis (Switzerland)), Tania Lohmann(Novartis (Switzerland)), Béatrice Duthey(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Daniela Stauffer(Novartis (Switzerland)), Dorothee Ristig(Novartis (Switzerland)), Valérie Schuler(Novartis (Switzerland)), Ingeborg Meigel(Novartis (Switzerland)), Christina Lampert(Novartis (Switzerland)), T. Peter Stein(Novartis (Switzerland)), Laurent Prézeau(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Jaroslav Blahoš(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Jean‐Philippe Pin(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Wolfgang Froestl(Novartis (Switzerland)), Rainer Kühn(Novartis (Switzerland)), Jakob Heid(Novartis (Switzerland)), Klemens Kaupmann(Novartis (Switzerland)), Bernhard Bettler(Novartis (Switzerland))
Journal of Neuroscience
February 15, 2001
Cited by 307Open Access
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Abstract

Assembly of fully functional GABA(B) receptors requires heteromerization of the GABA(B(1)) and GABA(B(2)) subunits. It is thought that GABA(B(1)) and GABA(B(2)) undergo coiled-coil dimerization in their cytoplasmic C termini and that assembly is necessary to overcome GABA(B(1)) retention in the endoplasmatic reticulum (ER). We investigated the mechanism underlying GABA(B(1)) trafficking to the cell surface. We identified a signal, RSRR, proximal to the coiled-coil domain of GABA(B(1)) that when deleted or mutagenized allows for surface delivery in the absence of GABA(B(2)). A similar motif, RXR, was recently shown to function as an ER retention/retrieval (ERR/R) signal in K(ATP) channels, demonstrating that G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and ion channels use common mechanisms to control surface trafficking. A C-terminal fragment of GABA(B(2)) is able to mask the RSRR signal and to direct the GABA(B(1)) monomer to the cell surface, where it is functionally inert. This indicates that in the heteromer, GABA(B(2)) participates in coupling to the G-protein. Mutagenesis of the C-terminal coiled-coil domains in GABA(B(1)) and GABA(B(2)) supports the possibility that their interaction is involved in shielding the ERR/R signal. However, assembly of heteromeric GABA(B) receptors is possible in the absence of the C-terminal domains, indicating that coiled-coil interaction is not necessary for function. Rather than guaranteeing heterodimerization, as previously assumed, the coiled-coil structure appears to be important for export of the receptor complex from the secretory apparatus.


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