1. Synergy of epidermal growth factor (EGFR) and angiotensin II (AT1R) receptor determines composition and temporal pattern of transcriptome variation
- Author
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Barbara Schreier, Virginie Dubourg, Stefanie Hübschmann, Sindy Rabe, Sigrid Mildenberger, and Michael Gekle
- Subjects
Pharmacology ,Epidermal growth factor receptor ,Myocardin-related transcription factor ,Angiotensin II receptor type 1 ,Signaling synergy ,Receptor Cross-Talk ,Cell Biology ,Vascular biology ,Receptor, Angiotensin, Type 1 ,ErbB Receptors ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,HEK293 Cells ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Humans ,Molecular Medicine ,Original Article ,Serum response factor ,Transcriptome ,Molecular Biology ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The tyrosine kinase receptor EGFR and the G-protein-coupled receptor AT1R induce essential cellular responses, in part via receptor crosstalk with an unknown role in nuclear information transfer and transcription regulation. We investigated whether this crosstalk results in linear, EGFR-mediated nuclear signalling or in parallel, synergistic information transfer leading to qualitative and temporal variations, relevant for gene expression and environment interaction. AT1R and EGFR synergistically activate SRF via the ERK1/2-TCF and actin-MRTF pathways. Synergism, comprised of switch-like and graded single cell response, converges on the transcription factors AP1 and EGR, resulting in synergistic transcriptome alterations, in qualitative (over-additive number of genes), quantitative (over-additive expression changes of individual genes) and temporal (more late onset and prolonged expressed genes) terms. Gene ontology and IPA® pathway analysis indicate prolonged cell stress (e.g. hypoxia-like) and dysregulated vascular biology. Synergism occurs during separate but simultaneous activation of both receptors and during AT1R-induced EGFR transactivation. EGFR and AT1R synergistically regulate gene expression in qualitative, quantitative and temporal terms with (patho)physiological relevance, extending the importance of EGFR-AT1R crosstalk beyond cytoplasmic signalling. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00018-021-04065-5.
- Published
- 2021