Abstract

Inter-regulation of adrenergic receptors (ARs) via cross-talk is a long appreciated but mechanistically unclear physiological phenomenon. Evidence from the AR literature and our own extensive studies on regulation of α2AARs by the scaffolding protein spinophilin have illuminated a potential novel mechanism for cross-talk from β to α2ARs. In the present study, we have characterized a mode of endogenous AR cross-talk in native adrenergic neurons whereby canonical βAR-mediated signaling modulates spinophilin-regulated α2AAR endocytosis through PKA. Our findings demonstrate that co-activation of β and α2AARs, either by application of endogenous agonist or by simultaneous stimulation with distinct selective agonists, results in acceleration of endogenous α2AAR endocytosis in native neurons. We show that receptor-independent PKA activation by forskolin is sufficient to accelerate α2AAR endocytosis and that α2AAR stimulation alone drives accelerated endocytosis in spinophilin-null neurons. Endocytic response acceleration by β/α2AAR co-activation is blocked by PKA inhibition and lost in spinophilin-null neurons, consistent with our previous finding that spinophilin is a substrate for phosphorylation by PKA that disrupts its interaction with α2AARs. Importantly, we show that α2AR agonist-mediated α2AAR/spinophilin interaction is blocked by βAR co-activation in a PKA-dependent fashion. We therefore propose a novel mechanism for cross-talk from β to α2ARs, whereby canonical βAR-mediated signaling coupled to PKA activation results in phosphorylation of spinophilin, disrupting its interaction with α2AARs and accelerating α2AAR endocytic responses. This mechanism of cross-talk has significant implications for endogenous adrenergic physiology and for therapeutic targeting of β and α2AARs.

Highlights

  • Cross-talk between G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) is an important but undercharacterized mechanism regulating receptor responsiveness

  • Our work has identified the scaffolding protein spinophilin (18 –20) as an ␣2AAR interacting partner [21,22,23], and we have characterized a novel regulatory mechanism whereby spinophilin serves as a functional antagonist at the ␣2AAR to the traditional GPCR-interacting partners GPCR kinase and arrestin [24]

  • Spinophilin is known to be a substrate for phosphorylation by PKA [27], and we have shown that this modification disrupts spinophilin/␣2AAR interaction and accelerates agonist-driven receptor endocytosis [28]

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Summary

Background

Cross-talk between GPCRs is an important but undercharacterized mechanism regulating receptor responsiveness. We propose a novel mechanism for cross-talk from ␤ to ␣2ARs, whereby canonical ␤AR-mediated signaling coupled to PKA activation results in phosphorylation of spinophilin, disrupting its interaction with ␣2AARs and accelerating ␣2AAR endocytic responses. This mechanism of cross-talk has significant implications for endogenous adrenergic physiology and for therapeutic targeting of ␤ and ␣2AARs. The physiological phenomenon of cross-talk between ␤- and ␣2-adrenergic receptor (AR) subtypes has long been indicated by reports in the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) literature. Our data establish a novel mechanism for unidirectional cross-talk from ␤ to ␣2ARs affecting ␣2AAR responsiveness in a setting with significant physiological and pharmacological importance

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