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Human MC4R variants affect endocytosis, trafficking and dimerization revealing multiple cellular mechanisms involved in weight regulation

Authors :
Brouwers, Bas
De Oliveira, Edson Mendes
Marti-Solano, Maria
Monteiro, Fabiola BF
Laurin, Suli-Anne
Keogh, Julia M
Henning, Elana
Bounds, Rebecca
Daly, Carole A
Houston, Shane
Ayinampudi, Vikram
Wasiluk, Natalia
Clarke, David
Plouffe, Bianca
Bouvier, Michel
Babu, M Madan
Farooqi, I Sadaf
Mokrosiński, Jacek
Publisher :
Elsevier BV

Abstract

The Melanocortin-4 Receptor (MC4R) plays a pivotal role in energy homeostasis. We used human MC4R mutations associated with an increased or decreased risk of obesity to dissect mechanisms that regulate MC4R function. Most obesity-associated mutations impair trafficking to the plasma membrane (PM), whereas obesity-protecting mutations either accelerate recycling to the PM or decrease internalization, resulting in enhanced signaling. MC4R mutations that do not affect canonical Gαs protein-mediated signaling, previously considered to be non-pathogenic, nonetheless disrupt agonist-induced internalization, β-arrestin recruitment, and/or coupling to Gαs, establishing their causal role in severe obesity. Structural mapping reveals ligand-accessible sites by which MC4R couples to effectors and residues involved in the homodimerization of MC4R, which is disrupted by multiple obesity-associated mutations. Human genetic studies reveal that endocytosis, intracellular trafficking, and homodimerization regulate MC4R function to a level that is physiologically relevant, supporting the development of chaperones, agonists, and allosteric modulators of MC4R for weight loss therapy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........da2e903284d474e532eb6f5b30efacd4