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Functional profiling of the G protein-coupled receptor C3aR1 reveals ligand-mediated biased agonism.

Authors :
Rodriguez, Pedro
Laskowski, Lauren J.
Pallais, Jean Pierre
Bock, Hailey A.
Cavalco, Natalie G.
Anderson, Emilie I.
Calkins, Maggie M.
Razzoli, Maria
Sham, Yuk Y.
McCorvy, John D.
Bartolomucci, Alessandro
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. Jan2024, Vol. 300 Issue 1, p1-16. 16p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are leading druggable targets for several medicines, but many GPCRs are still untapped for their therapeutic potential due to poor understanding of specific signaling properties. The complement C3a receptor 1 (C3aR1) has been extensively studied for its physiological role in C3a-mediated anaphylaxis/inflammation, and in TLQP-21-mediated lipolysis, but direct evidence for the functional relevance of the C3a and TLQP-21 ligands and signal transduction mechanisms are still limited. In addition, C3aR1 G protein coupling specificity is still unclear, and whether endogenous ligands, or drug-like compounds, show ligand-mediated biased agonism is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that C3aR1 couples preferentially to Gi/o/z proteins and can recruit β-arrestins to cause internalization. Furthermore, we showed that in comparison to C3a63-77, TLQP-21 exhibits a preference toward Gi/o-mediated signaling compared to β-arrestin recruitment and internalization. We also show that the purported antagonist SB290157 is a very potent C3aR1 agonist, where antagonism of ligand-stimulated C3aR1 calcium flux is caused by potent β-arrestin-mediated internalization. Finally, ligand-mediated signaling bias impacted cell function as demonstrated by the regulation of calcium influx, lipolysis in adipocytes, phagocytosis in microglia, and degranulation in mast cells. Overall, we characterize C3aR1 as a Gi/o/z-coupled receptor and demonstrate the functional relevance of ligand-mediated signaling bias in key cellular models. Due to C3aR1 and its endogenous ligands being implicated in inflammatory and metabolic diseases, these results are of relevance toward future C3aR1 drug discovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
300
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175223385
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2023.105549