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Integrin β 3 directly inhibits the Gα 13 -p115RhoGEF interaction to regulate G protein signaling and platelet exocytosis.

Yaping ZhangXiaojuan ZhaoBo ShenYanyan BaiClaire ChangAleksandra StojanovicCan WangAndrew MackGary DengRandal A SkidgelNi ChengXiaoping Du
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
The integrins and G protein-coupled receptors are both fundamental in cell biology. The cross talk between these two, however, is unclear. Here we show that β 3 integrins negatively regulate G protein-coupled signaling by directly inhibiting the Gα 13 -p115RhoGEF interaction. Furthermore, whereas β 3 deficiency or integrin antagonists inhibit integrin-dependent platelet aggregation and exocytosis (granule secretion), they enhance G protein-coupled RhoA activation and integrin-independent secretion. In contrast, a β 3 -derived Gα 13 -binding peptide or Gα 13 knockout inhibits G protein-coupled RhoA activation and both integrin-independent and dependent platelet secretion without affecting primary platelet aggregation. In a mouse model of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in vivo, the β 3 -derived Gα 13 -binding peptide inhibits platelet secretion of granule constituents, which exacerbates inflammation and ischemia/reperfusion injury. These data establish crucial integrin-G protein crosstalk, providing a rationale for therapeutic approaches that inhibit exocytosis in platelets and possibly other cells without adverse effects associated with loss of cell adhesion.
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