Natural variations of wild Caenorhabditis elegans isolates having either Phe-215 or Val-215 in NPR-1, a putative orphan neuropeptide Y-like G protein-coupled receptor, result in either "social" or "solitary" feeding behaviors (de Bono, M., and Bargmann, C. I. (1998) Cell 94, 679-689). We identified a nematode peptide, GLGPR-PLRF-NH2 (AF9), as a ligand activating the cloned NPR-1 receptor heterologously expressed in mammalian cells. Shifting cell culture temperatures from 37 to 28 °C, implemented 24 h after transfections, was essential for detectable functional expression of NPR-1. AF9 treatments linked both cloned receptor variants to activation of Gi/Go proteins and cAMP inhibition, thus allowing for classification of NPR-1 as an inhibitory G protein-coupled receptor. The Val-215 receptor isoform displayed higher binding and functional activity than its Phe-215 counterpart. This finding parallels the in vivo observation of a more potent repression of social feeding by the npr-1 gene encoding the Val-215 form of the receptor, resulting in dispersing (solitary) animals. Since neuropeptide Y shows no sequence homology to AF9 and was functionally inactive at the cloned NPR-1, we propose to rename NPR-1 and refer to it as an AF9 receptor, AF9-R1.
CITATION STYLE
Kubiak, T. M., Larsen, M. J., Nulf, S. C., Zantello, M. R., Burton, K. J., Bowman, J. W., … Lowery, D. E. (2003). Differential Activation of “Social” and “Solitary” Variants of the Caenorhabditis elegans G Protein-coupled Receptor NPR-1 by Its Cognate Ligand AF9. In Journal of Biological Chemistry (Vol. 278, pp. 33724–33729). https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M304861200
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