Abstract

Human endothelial cell thrombin receptors were functionally expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes by injection of RNA extracted from human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Oocytes injected with endothelial cell RNA responded to thrombin with a Ca 2+-dependent depolarizing current whose size depended on the amount of RNA injected. In oocytes expressing thrombin receptors, thrombin caused homologous but not heterologous desensitization. Both the catalytic and anion-binding exosites of thrombin were necessary to elicit depolarizing currents. Thus, Xenopus laevis oocytes injected with mRNA from human endothelial cells express Ca 2+-dependent thrombin receptors which share many common features with thrombin receptors on intact endothelial cells. Xenopus oocytes may, therefore, be used as a screening system in the expression cloning of the endothelial cell thrombin receptor.

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