Abstract

Poly(A)+-selected RNA prepared from cells or tissues that express a homogeneous population of either beta 1- or beta 2-adrenergic receptors was isolated and then microinjected into Xenopus laevis oocytes. Following microinjection, the expression of beta-adrenergic receptors was assessed by equilibrium radioligand binding analysis using the antagonist ligand [3H]dihydroalprenolol. The pharmacology of the newly- expressed beta-adrenergic receptors in oocyte membranes was the same as that of the original tissue used as a source of RNA. Hybridization of nick-translated cDNA of hamster beta 2-adrenergic receptor to poly(A)+-selected RNA from tissues containing beta 2-adrenergic receptors was to a mRNA species of 2.2 kilobases. In contrast, hybridization of the cDNA probe to poly(A)+-selected RNA from tissues containing beta 1-adrenergic receptors was to a mRNA species of 2.0 kilobases. A single-stranded fragment of hamster beta 2-adrenergic receptor cDNA corresponding to nucleotides 730-886 was isolated and uniformly radiolabeled. This region of the gene is predicted to encode for the entire second exofacial loop (L4-5), the entire fifth transmembrane-spanning region, and the first 5 amino acid residues of the third cytoplasmic loop (L5-6) of the beta 2-adrenergic receptor. Hybridization at 48 and 56 degrees C of poly(A)+-selected RNA prepared from sources that express either beta 1 or beta 2-adrenergic receptors to the antisense orientation strand of this region of the beta 2-adrenergic receptor cDNA was followed by S1 endonuclease digestion of nonhybridized sequences. At 48 degrees C, S1-resistant hybrids from both sources of RNA protected the probe from S1 endonuclease digestion. At 56 degrees C, however, only the RNA prepared from the source of beta 2-adrenergic receptors protected the probe from S1 endonuclease digestion. These results demonstrate that the mRNAs encoding for the structurally homologous beta 1- and beta 2-adrenergic receptors are distinct in the pharmacological specificity of their translation products and in their size and structure.

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