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A molecular mechanism to diversify Ca 2+ signaling downstream of Gs protein-coupled receptors.

Julian BrandsSergi BravoLars JürgenliemkeLukas GrätzHannes SchihadaFabian FrechenJudith AlenfelderCy PfeilPaul Georg OhseSuzune HiratsukaKouki KawakamiLuna C SchmackeNina HeyckeAsuka InoueGabriele KönigAlexander PfeiferDagmar WachtenGunnar SchulteTorsten SteinmetzerVal J WattsJesús GomezaKatharina SimonEvi Kostenis
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
A long-held tenet in inositol-lipid signaling is that cleavage of membrane phosphoinositides by phospholipase Cβ (PLCβ) isozymes to increase cytosolic Ca 2+ in living cells is exclusive to Gq- and Gi-sensitive G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Here we extend this central tenet and show that Gs-GPCRs also partake in inositol-lipid signaling and thereby increase cytosolic Ca 2+ . By combining CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing to delete Gα s , the adenylyl cyclase isoforms 3 and 6, or the PLCβ1-4 isozymes, with pharmacological and genetic inhibition of Gq and G11, we pin down Gs-derived Gβγ as driver of a PLCβ2/3-mediated cytosolic Ca 2+ release module. This module does not require but crosstalks with Gα s -dependent cAMP, demands Gα q to release PLCβ3 autoinhibition, but becomes Gq-independent with mutational disruption of the PLCβ3 autoinhibited state. Our findings uncover the key steps of a previously unappreciated mechanism utilized by mammalian cells to finetune their calcium signaling regulation through Gs-GPCRs.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • genome editing
  • living cells
  • protein kinase
  • fluorescent probe
  • gene expression
  • fatty acid
  • single molecule
  • amino acid
  • transcription factor