Rescue of defective G protein–coupled receptor function in vivo by intermolecular cooperation

Adolfo Rivero‐Müller(University of Turku), Yen‐Yin Chou(Hammersmith Hospital), Inhae Ji(University of Kentucky), Svetlana Lajić(Hammersmith Hospital), Aylin C. Hanyaloglu(Hammersmith Hospital), Kim Jonas(Hammersmith Hospital), Nafis A. Rahman(University of Turku), Tae H. Ji(University of Kentucky), Ilpo Huhtaniemi(University of Turku)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 11, 2010
Cited by 207Open Access
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Abstract

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are ubiquitous mediators of signaling of hormones, neurotransmitters, and sensing. The old dogma is that a one ligand/one receptor complex constitutes the functional unit of GPCR signaling. However, there is mounting evidence that some GPCRs form dimers or oligomers during their biosynthesis, activation, inactivation, and/or internalization. This evidence has been obtained exclusively from cell culture experiments, and proof for the physiological significance of GPCR di/oligomerization in vivo is still missing. Using the mouse luteinizing hormone receptor (LHR) as a model GPCR, we demonstrate that transgenic mice coexpressing binding-deficient and signaling-deficient forms of LHR can reestablish normal LH actions through intermolecular functional complementation of the mutant receptors in the absence of functional wild-type receptors. These results provide compelling in vivo evidence for the physiological relevance of intermolecular cooperation in GPCR signaling.


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