Abstract

trkB activation results in tyrosine phosphorylation of N-terminal Kir3 residues, decreasing channel activation. To determine the mechanism of this effect, we reconstituted Kir3, trkB, and the mu opioid receptor in Xenopus oocytes. Activation of trkB by BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) accelerated Kir3 deactivation following termination of mu opioid receptor signaling. Similarly, overexpression of RGS4, a GTPase-activating protein (GAP), accelerated Kir3 deactivation. Blocking GTPase activity with GTPgammaS also prevented Kir3 deactivation, and the GTPgammaS effect was not reversed by BDNF treatment. These results suggest that BDNF treatment did not reduce Kir3 affinity for Gbetagamma but rather acted to accelerate GTPase activity, like RGS4. Tyrosine phosphatase inhibition by peroxyvanadate pretreatment reversibly mimicked the BDNF/trkB effect, indicating that tyrosine phosphorylation of Kir3 may have caused the GTPase acceleration. Tyrosine to phenylalanine substitution in the N-terminal domain of Kir3.4 blocked the BDNF effect, supporting the hypothesis that phosphorylation of these tyrosines was responsible. Like other GAPs, Kir3.4 contains a tyrosine-arginine-glutamine motif that is thought to function by interacting with G protein catalytic domains to facilitate GTP hydrolysis. These data suggest that the N-terminal tyrosine hydroxyls in Kir3 normally mask the GAP activity and that modification by phosphorylation or phenylalanine substitution reveals the GAP domain. Thus, BDNF activation of trkB could inhibit Kir3 by facilitating channel deactivation.

Highlights

  • Phosphorylation [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • These results suggest that Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) treatment did not reduce Kir3 affinity for G␤␥ but rather acted to accelerate GTPase activity, like RGS4

  • To investigate how tyrosine phosphorylation cascades initiated by trkB might regulate Kir3 activation by G protein receptors, we coexpressed cRNA for Kir3.1, Kir3.4, trkB, and MOR in Xenopus oocytes

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Summary

Introduction

Phosphorylation [1,2,3,4,5,6]. For example, in a previous study [7], we found that tyrosine phosphorylation of Kir resulted in channel inhibition. Understanding the basis for the modulation of Kir by tyrosine phosphorylation would provide additional insight into the processes regulating the activity of this physiologically significant channel and a molecular basis for interaction between GPCR and tyrosine kinase receptor signaling. To test this hypothesis, we reconstituted the mu opioid receptor (MOR, a GPCR), Kir, and trkB in Xenopus oocytes and investigated channel activation and deactivation kinetics. BDNF treatment no longer accelerated deactivation kinetics of the mutant channels These results suggest that phosphorylation of Kir unmasks a GAP domain embedded in the sequence of Kir itself, promoting GAP activity

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