Mutations of the asparagine117 residue of a receptor activity-modifying protein 1-dependent human calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor result in selective loss of function

Biochemistry
R GujerWalter Born

Abstract

The initially orphan human calcitonin (CT) receptor-like receptor (hCRLR) interacts with novel accessory receptor activity-modifying protein 1 (RAMP1) to reveal a functional CT gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor. In mammalian cells, RAMP1 is required for mature N-glycosylation of the hCRLR predicted to occur at Asn(60), Asn(112), and/or Asn(117) in the amino-terminal extracellular domain. Here we have shown that the substitution of Asn(117) with Ala, Gln, Thr, or Pro abolished CGRP-evoked cAMP formation which was left unchanged when the Asn(117) was replaced with Asp. Moreover, the hCRLR and the Asn(117) mutants exhibited comparable N-glycosylation and cell surface expression, and the association with RAMP1 was only slightly impaired. In contrast, the hCRLR Asn(60,112) to Thr double mutant exhibited defective RAMP1-dependent N-glycosylation, and impaired cell surface expression and CGRP receptor function. Unlike Asn(60) and Asn(112), Asn(117) is normally not N-glycosylated, but essential for CGRP binding to the hCRLR-RAMP1 complex.

Citations

Sep 14, 2004·Médecine sciences : M/S·Carine Cueille, Jean-Michel Garel
Jan 29, 2011·Neuropeptides·Sarah-Jane Smillie, Susan D Brain
Jun 9, 2011·British Journal of Pharmacology·James BarwellDebbie L Hay

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