The receptor for parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related peptide is hydrolyzed and its signaling properties are altered by directly binding the calpain small subunit

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Abstract

We show calcium-dependent, direct binding between the N-teminal portion of the PTH/PTHrP receptor (PTH1R) C-terminal intracellular tail and the calpain small subunit. Binding requires, but may not be limited to, amino acids W474, S475, and W477. The wild-type, full-length rat (r) PTH1R, but not rPTH1R with W474A/W477A substitutions, copurifies with the endogenous calpain small subunit in HEK293 cells. Calpain hydrolyzes ΔNt-rPTH1R, a receptor with a 156-amino acid N-terminal deletion, in a calcium-dependent manner in vitro and in intact cells. Most importantly, PTH stimulation increases the cleavage of ΔNt-rPTH1R and rPTH1R-yellow fluorescent protein in HEK293 cells, and of talin in HEK293 cells expressing rPTH1R-yellow fluorescent protein and in ROS17/2.8 osteoblast-like cells that express rPTH1R endogenously. The absence of calpain in Capn4-null embryonic fibroblasts and the lowered calpain activity in MC3T3-E1 osteoblastic cells due to stable expression of the calpain inhibitor, calpastatin, reduce PTH-stimulated cAMP accumulation. The calpain small subunit is the second protein, in addition to the sodium-hydrogen exchanger regulatory factor, and the first enzyme that binds the PTH1R; PTH1R bound to both of these proteins results in altered PTH signaling. Copyright © 2005 by The Endocrine Society.

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Shimada, M., Mahon, M. J., Greer, P. A., & Segre, G. V. (2005). The receptor for parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related peptide is hydrolyzed and its signaling properties are altered by directly binding the calpain small subunit. Endocrinology, 146(5), 2336–2344. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2004-1637

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