Abstract

We have compared the agonist-induced down-regulation of human alpha1A-, alpha1B- and alpha1D-adrenoceptors upon stable expression in rat-1 fibroblasts. During a 24-h incubation the agonist phenylephrine downregulated alpha1A- and alpha1 -adrenoceptors in a concentration-dependent manner. While maximum downregulation was similar for both subtypes, the threshold concentration for significant reductions was markedly higher for alpha1A- than for alpha(1B-adrenoceptors (10 microM vs. 100 nM). The downregulation of both subtypes by 100 microM phenylephrine was time-dependent, and significant reductions were observed already after 2-4 h. In contrast, incubation of alpha1D-adrenoceptor-expressing cells with phenylephrine increased receptor number in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. The downregulation of alpha1B-adrenoceptors by 100 microM phenylephrine for 24 h was accompanied by a matching reduction in mRNA abundance, but no such reduction was seen for alpha-adrenoceptors. These treatment conditions also caused a functional desensitization of agonist-stimulated inositol phosphate formation for alpha1A- and alpha1B- but not for alpha1D-adrenoceptors. Treatment with the phorbol ester phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate did not change receptor density or mRNA abundance and did not cause functional desensitization. We conclude that human alpha1-adrenoceptor subtypes are differentially regulated by agonist treatment even if they are expressed in the same cell line.

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