AI Article Synopsis

  • The study addresses the challenges of using traditional ligands to measure G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) like the cannabinoid CB receptor, which tend to aggregate in solution due to their hydrophobic nature.
  • Researchers developed soluble and stable recombinant protein constructs (GST-CB1) for use as standards in quantitative Western blot analysis, yielding comparable results to the conventional radioligand binding assays.
  • The findings suggest that this Western blot approach is a viable, simpler, and less hazardous alternative for analyzing GPCR expression across various biological samples.

Article Abstract

Background: Replacement of radioligand binding assays with antibody-antigen interaction-based approaches for quantitative analysis of G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) levels requires the use of purified protein standards containing the antigen. GPCRs in general and cannabinoid CB receptor in particular show a progressive tendency to aggregate and precipitate in aqueous solution outside of their biological context due to the low solubility that the hydrophobic nature imprinted by their seven transmembrane domains. This renders full-length recombinant GPCRs useless for analytical purposes, a problem that can be overcome by engineering soluble recombinant fragments of the receptor containing the antigen.

Results: Here we generated highly soluble and stable recombinant protein constructs GST-CB1 and GST-CB1 containing much of the human CB receptor C-terminal tail for use as standard and negative control, respectively, in quantitative Western blot analysis of CB receptor expression on crude synaptosomes of the adult rat brain cortex. To this end we used three different antibodies, all raised against a peptide comprising the C-terminal residues 443-473 of the mouse CB receptor that corresponds to residues 442-472 in the human homolog. Estimated values of CB receptor density obtained by quantitative Western blot were of the same order of magnitude but slightly higher than values obtained by the radioligand saturation binding assay.

Conclusions: Collectively, here we provide a suitable Western blot-based design as a simple, cost-effective and radioactivity-free alternative for the quantitative analysis of CB receptor expression, and potentially of any GPCR, in a variety of biological samples. The discrepancies between the results obtained by quantitative Western blot and radioligand saturation binding techniques are discussed in the context of their particular theoretical bases and methodological constraints.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9479267PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12934-022-01914-1DOI Listing

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