| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10816544 | Cellular Signalling | 2005 | 8 Pages | 
Abstract
												The vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) VPAC1 receptor is preferentially coupled to Gαs protein that stimulates adenylate cyclase activity and also to Gαq and Gαi proteins that stimulate the inositol phosphate/calcium pathway. Previous studies indicated the importance of the third intracellular loop of the receptor for G protein coupling. By site-directed mutation of the human recombinant receptor expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells, we identified two domains in this loop that contain clusters of basic residues conserved in most of the G-protein-coupled seven transmembrane domains receptors. We found that mutations in the proximal domain (K322) reduced the capability of VIP to increase adenylate cyclase activity without any change in the calcium response, whereas mutations in the distal part of the loop (R338, L339, R341) markedly reduced the calcium increase and Gαi coupling but only weakly the adenylate cyclase activity. Thus, the interaction of different G proteins with the VPAC1 receptor involves different receptor sub-domains.
											Related Topics
												
													Life Sciences
													Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
													Biochemistry
												
											Authors
												Ingrid Langer, Patrick Robberecht, 
											![First Page Preview: Mutations in the carboxy-terminus of the third intracellular loop of the human recombinant VPAC1 receptor impair VIP-stimulated [Ca2+]i increase but not adenylate cyclase stimulation Mutations in the carboxy-terminus of the third intracellular loop of the human recombinant VPAC1 receptor impair VIP-stimulated [Ca2+]i increase but not adenylate cyclase stimulation](/preview/png/10816544.png)