Abstract

Although muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) regulate proliferation in many cell types, the signaling pathways involved are unclear. The participation of the small GTPases Rac1 and RhoA in M(3) mAChR-mediated inhibition of proliferation was investigated by activating M(3) mAChRs stably transfected in Chinese hamster ovary cells stably coexpressing hemagglutinin (HA)-tagged wild-type or mutant Rac1 or RhoA proteins. Activation of M(3) mAChRs activates both Rac1 and RhoA and inhibits cell proliferation in all cell lines tested. mAChR-mediated inhibition of proliferation is diminished in cells expressing dominant-negative HA-Rac1(Asn17) (m3DNRac) but is enhanced in cells expressing HA-Rac1 (m3WTRac) or constitutively active HA-Rac(Val12) (m3CARac). The activation of mAChRs in m3WTRac and m3CARac cells also induces apoptosis. Expression of wild-type or mutant RhoA proteins does not alter mAChR-mediated inhibition of proliferation. mAChR-induced inhibition of proliferation is abrogated in all cell lines when Galpha(q/11) signaling is terminated by transient expression of the COOH-terminal fragment of phospholipase C (PLC-beta1ct), the NH(2)-terminal fragment of G protein-coupled receptor kinase, or the regulator of G protein signaling 2. Pretreatment of all cells expressing wild-type or mutant Rac1 proteins with edelfosine, a phosphatidylinositol-specific PLC inhibitor, or Go 6976, which inhibits conventional protein kinase C (PKC) isoforms, diminishes the M(3) mAChR's ability to inhibit proliferation. Our results identify Galpha(q/11), PLC, and PKC as participants in the M(3) mAChR-mediated inhibition of cell proliferation. These findings indicate that in the context of high Rac1 activity, but not RhoA activity, M(3) mAChR-mediated activation of these participants triggers cell death.

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