| Laboratory of Cornelius Krasel | |||||||
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Cell Biology of G-protein-coupled receptors
As shown in the scheme,
desensitisation, internalisation and recycling
of G-protein-coupled receptors are intimately connected. The whole process
is initiated by binding of an agonist to the receptor, which triggers a
signal (usually via heterotrimeric G-proteins). However, agonist binding
also converts the receptor into a substrate for a family of kinases, the
G-protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs). These kinases phosphorylate
only agonist-activated receptors. Subsequently, the phosphorylated receptor
becomes a binding partner for arrestins. Arrestins are normally cytosolic
proteins, but they recognise agonist-activated, phosphorylated receptors
and bind them. This binding makes the receptor inacessible for G-proteins
(i.e. the arrestin-bound receptor is desensitised), and it targets the
receptor for internalisation. This is because arrestins do not only bind
receptors, but they also bind components of clathrin-coated pits. Thus,
arrestin-bound receptors move into clathrin-coated pits and are then
internalised.
We are using a variety of methods to investigate these processes. We are able to purify most of the participating proteins from either bacteria or insect cells. Thereby we can investigate regulation of these proteins in vitro. Recently we have produced arrestin2 in a new crystal form (PDB entry 2WTR). We also look at binding between proteins in vitro. However, we also perform a range of experiments in living cells. For example, we can determine the internalisation of receptors by ligand binding. We also look at translocation of GFP-tagged proteins by live-cell confocal microscopy (see example below). Finally, we investigate protein-protein interactions in single living cells using fluorescence resonance energy transfer between CFP- and YFP-tagged interaction partners.
At the moment, we are
particularly interested in the regulation of G-protein-coupled receptor
kinases and the interaction mechanism of arrestins with G-protein-coupled
receptors. We use both protein biochemistry and cell biology methods to
investigate these questions.
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