AI Article Synopsis

  • Membrane receptor clustering is crucial for effective cell communication, but its exact role in signaling is still unclear.
  • Researchers created a dynamic platform using a chelator nanotool to stimulate clustering of neuropeptide Y hormone receptors (YR), enabling the study of how clustering impacts receptor function.
  • The findings showed that preclustered receptors enhanced signaling responses to lower ligand concentrations, suggesting that clustering plays a significant role in optimizing cell reactions and that different mechanisms are involved in ligand-independent and ligand-induced signaling.

Article Abstract

Membrane receptor clustering is fundamental to cell-cell communication; however, the physiological function of receptor clustering in cell signaling remains enigmatic. Here, we developed a dynamic platform to induce cluster formation of neuropeptide Y hormone receptors (YR) by a chelator nanotool. The multivalent interaction enabled a dynamic exchange of histidine-tagged YR within the clusters. Fast YR enrichment in clustered areas triggered ligand-independent signaling as determined by an increase in cytosolic calcium and cell migration. Notably, the calcium and motility response to ligand-induced activation was amplified in preclustered cells, suggesting a key role of receptor clustering in sensitizing the dose response to lower ligand concentrations. Ligand-independent versus ligand-induced signaling differed in the binding of arrestin-3 as a downstream effector, which was recruited to the clusters only in the presence of the ligand. This approach allows receptor clustering, raising the possibility to explore different receptor activation modalities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9614963PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c03506DOI Listing

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