β-Arrestin-independent endosomal cAMP signaling by a polypeptide hormone GPCR.

Nat Chem Biol

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.

Published: March 2024

Many G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) initiate a second phase of stimulatory heterotrimeric G protein (G)-coupled cAMP signaling after endocytosis. The prevailing current view is that the endosomal signal is inherently β-arrestin-dependent because β-arrestin is necessary for receptor internalization and, for some GPCRs, to prolong the endosomal signal. Here we revise this view by showing that the vasoactive intestinal peptide receptor 1 (VIPR1), a secretin-family polypeptide hormone receptor, does not require β-arrestin to internalize or to generate an endosomal signal. β-Arrestin instead resolves the plasma membrane and endosomal signaling phases into sequential cAMP peaks by desensitizing the plasma membrane phase without affecting the endosomal phase. This appears to occur through the formation of functionally distinct VIPR1-β-arrestin complexes at each location that differ in their phosphorylation dependence. We conclude that endosomal GPCR signaling can occur in the absence of β-arrestin and that β-arrestin sculpts the spatiotemporal profile of cellular GPCR-G protein signaling through location-specific remodeling of GPCR-β-arrestin complexes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10907292PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41589-023-01412-4DOI Listing

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