β-Arrestin2 Plays Permissive Roles in the Inhibitory Activities of RGS9-2 on G Protein-Coupled Receptors by Maintaining RGS9-2 in the Open Conformation

  • Zheng M
  • Cheong S
  • Min C
  • et al.
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Abstract

Together with G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) kinases (GRKs) and β-arrestins, RGS proteins are the major family of molecules that control the signaling of GPCRs. The expression pattern of one of these RGS family members, RGS9-2, coincides with that of the dopamine D(3) receptor (D(3)R) in the brain, and in vivo studies have shown that RGS9-2 regulates the signaling of D2-like receptors. In this study, β-arrestin2 was found to be required for scaffolding of the intricate interactions among the dishevelled-EGL10-pleckstrin (DEP) domain of RGS9-2, Gβ5, R7-binding protein (R7BP), and D(3)R. The DEP domain of RGS9-2, under the permission of β-arrestin2, inhibited the signaling of D(3)R in collaboration with Gβ5. β-Arrestin2 competed with R7BP and Gβ5 so that RGS9-2 is placed in the cytosolic region in an open conformation which is able to inhibit the signaling of GPCRs. The affinity of the receptor protein for β-arrestin2 was a critical factor that determined the selectivity of RGS9-2 for the receptor it regulates. These results show that β-arrestins function not only as mediators of receptor-G protein uncoupling and initiators of receptor endocytosis but also as scaffolding proteins that control and coordinate the inhibitory effects of RGS proteins on the signaling of certain GPCRs.

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Zheng, M., Cheong, S.-Y., Min, C., Jin, M., Cho, D.-I., & Kim, K.-M. (2011). β-Arrestin2 Plays Permissive Roles in the Inhibitory Activities of RGS9-2 on G Protein-Coupled Receptors by Maintaining RGS9-2 in the Open Conformation. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 31(24), 4887–4901. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.05690-11

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