Abstract

Endothelins regulate blood pressure in mammals through G protein-coupled receptors. Two receptor subtypes, ETA and ETB, exist which differ by their agonist profiles. Here we show subtype-specific differences in the inactivation of these endothelin receptors. Using a modified inositol phosphate accumulation assay, we found that stimulation of ETA by endothelin-1 results in sustained activation of the subtype, retaining >30% of its initial activity even 20 min after agonist administration, whereas the ETB rapidly deactivated after agonist stimulation, losing >80% of its initial activity within 5 min after endothelin application. The discrepancy in receptor inactivation is reflected by subtype-specific differences in receptor phosphorylation. Whereas ETA failed to undergo ligand-induced phosphorylation, the ETB was rapidly phosphorylated in response to agonist stimulation. By contrast, the kinetics of ligand-induced internalization were essentially identical for the receptor subtypes, suggesting endothelin receptor internalization being independent of ligand-induced receptor phosphorylation. Interestingly, a strong correlation was observed between the time course of ETA inactivation and ETA internalization. Therefore, our data suggest a subtype-specific inactivation of human endothelin receptors: fast receptor phosphorylation in the case of ETB and slow receptor internalization in the case of ETA. Subtype-specific modulation of endothelin receptors may account for the short-term hypotensive effects of endothelins via rapidly down-regulating ETB receptors and the long-lasting hypertensive effects due to sustained ETA activation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call