Abstract

Pertussis toxin inhibits chemotaxis of neutrophils by preventing chemoattractant receptors from activating trimeric G proteins in the Gi subfamily. In HEK293 cells expressing recombinant receptors, directional migration toward appropriate agonist ligands requires release of free G protein betagamma subunits and can be triggered by agonists for receptors coupled to Gi but not by agonists for receptors coupled to two other G proteins, Gs and Gq. Because activation of any G protein presumably releases free Gbetagamma, we tested the hypothesis that chemotaxis also requires activated alpha subunits (Galphai) of Gi proteins. HEK293 cells were stably cotransfected with the Gi-coupled receptor for interleukin-8, CXCR1, and with a chimeric Galpha, Galphaqz5, which resembles Galphai in susceptibility to activation by Gi-coupled receptors but cannot regulate the Galphai effector, adenylyl cyclase. These cells, unlike cells expressing CXCR1 alone, migrated toward interleukin-8 even after treatment with pertussis toxin, which prevents activation of endogenous Galphai but not that of Galphaqz5. We infer that chemotaxis does not require activation of Galphai. Because chemotaxis is mediated by Gbetagamma subunits released when Gi-coupled receptors activate Galphaqz5, but not when Gq- or Gs-coupled receptors activate their respective G proteins, we propose that Gi-coupled receptors transmit a necessary chemotactic signal that is independent of Galphai.

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