Abstract

The N-terminal region of G protein-coupled receptors can be efficiently targeted for the generation of receptor-selective antibodies. These antibodies are useful for the biochemical characterization of the receptors. In this study, we developed a set of criteria to select the optimal epitope and applied them to generate antibodies to the N-terminal region of 34 different G protein-coupled receptors. The antibody characterization revealed that a subset of antibodies exhibited increased recognition of the receptor following agonist treatment and this increase could be blocked by treatment with the receptor antagonist. An analysis of the epitopes showed that those antibodies that exhibit increased recognition are on average twelve residues long, have an overall net negative charge and are enriched in aspartic and glutamic acids. These antibodies are useful since they facilitate studies examining dose dependent increases in recognition of receptors in heterologous cells as well as in native tissue. Another interesting use of these antibodies is that they facilitate measuring changes in receptor recognition in brain following peripheral drug administration; for example, systemic administration of cocaine, a blocker of dopamine transporter that increases local dopamine levels at the synapse, was found to lead to increases in antibody recognition of dopamine receptors in the brain. Taken together these studies, in addition to describing novel tools to study native receptors, provide a framework for the generation of antibodies to G protein-coupled receptors that can detect ligand-induced conformational changes.

Highlights

  • G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) play many biological functions by activating distinct and diverse signal transduction pathways in different tissues

  • Selection of epitopes and generation of the antibodies Since studies with GPCRs have been severely hampered by a lack of antibodies that selectively recognize native receptors in endogenous tissue, we focused on the N-terminal regions of family A GPCRs and generated antibodies to 34 individual receptors

  • The criteria applied for the selection of the antigenic epitopes were: (i) location within the N-terminal region, (ii) between 9–17 amino acids in length, (iii) most conserved across species, (iv) relatively hydrophilic in nature, (v) next to glycosylatable residues, (vi) contain or be near one or more proline residues, (vii) not containing cysteine

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Summary

Introduction

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) play many biological functions by activating distinct and diverse signal transduction pathways in different tissues. Membranes (5 μg) from HEK-293 cells expressing individual receptors were treated with 1 μM of receptor agonist and changes in receptor recognition were ascertained by ELISA using anti-receptor antibodies as described in Methods.

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