Abstract

Opioid receptor pharmacology in vivo has predicted a greater number of receptor subtypes than explained by the profiles of the three cloned opioid receptors, and the functional dependence of the receptors on each other shown in gene-deleted animal models remains unexplained. One mechanism for such findings is the generation of novel signaling complexes by receptor hetero-oligomerization, which we previously showed results in significantly different pharmacology for mu and delta receptor hetero-oligomers compared with the individual receptors. In the present study, we show that deltorphin-II is a fully functional agonist of the mu-delta heteromer, which induced desensitization and inhibited adenylyl cyclase through a pertussis toxin-insensitive G protein. Activation of the mu-delta receptor heteromer resulted in preferential activation of Galpha(z), illustrated by incorporation of GTPgamma(35)S, whereas activation of the individually expressed mu and delta receptors preferentially activated Galpha(i). The unique pharmacology of the mu-delta heteromer was dependent on the reciprocal involvement of the distal carboxyl tails of both receptors, so that truncation of the distal mu receptor carboxyl tail modified the delta-selective ligand-binding pocket, and truncation of the delta receptor distal carboxyl tail modified the mu-selective binding pocket. The distal carboxyl tails of both receptors also had a significant role in receptor interaction, as evidenced by the reduced ability to co-immunoprecipitate when the carboxyl tails were truncated. The interaction between mu and delta receptors occurred constitutively when the receptors were co-expressed, but did not occur when receptor expression was temporally separated, indicating that the hetero-oligomers were generated by a co-translational mechanism.

Highlights

  • Because deltorphin-II appeared to function as an agonist of the heteromeric ␮-␦ receptors, cells expressing both receptors were exposed to the drug for 1– 4 h (n ϭ 3), and receptor density was evaluated on the cell surface by whole cell binding

  • Co-expression of these ␮ receptor truncation mutants with the ␦ opioid receptor revealed recovery of affinity with respect to the DPDPE-detected high affinity site but without full recovery of affinity of the low affinity site (Fig. 10). These results indicate that truncation of the terminal carboxyl tail portions of ␮ and ␦ opioid receptors resulted in preserved high affinity agonist-detected ␮- and ␦-selective pharmacology when the two receptors were co-expressed

  • The switch from Gi3 activation by agonist interaction of ␮ and ␦ receptor homo-oligomers to Gz activation by ␮-␦ heteromer activation represents the first definitive demonstration of a radical shift in G protein specificity for a hetero-oligomeric receptor complex to one that is different from the specificity of that of its receptor constituents

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Summary

Introduction

We have provided evidence for the direct interaction of ␮ and ␦ opioid receptors to form hetero-oligomers, with generation of novel pharmacology and G protein coupling properties, distinct from that demonstrated when each receptor was expressed individually [6]. The functional roles for hetero-oligomerization of GPCRs appear varied, ranging from chaperone-like aiding of cell surface localization to novel pharmacology and signal transduction properties, depending on the interacting receptors [4]. We demonstrated that deltorphin-II was an agonist of the ␮-␦ heteromer, capable of inducing desensitization and selectively activating the pertussis toxin-insensitive G␣ protein Gz, whereas agonist activation of the individual ␮ and ␦ receptors activated the pertussis toxin-sensitive Gi. We determined that the distal carboxyl tails of both receptors participated in the structural basis for the generation of the unique pharmacology of the ␮ and ␦ heteromer and had a significant role in the interaction between the receptors

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