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Epithelial Gpr116 regulates pulmonary alveolar homeostasis via Gq/11 signaling
Kari Brown, … , Jeffrey A. Whitsett, James P. Bridges
Kari Brown, … , Jeffrey A. Whitsett, James P. Bridges
Published June 2, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(11):e93700. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.93700.
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Research Article Cell biology Pulmonology

Epithelial Gpr116 regulates pulmonary alveolar homeostasis via Gq/11 signaling

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Abstract

Pulmonary function is dependent upon the precise regulation of alveolar surfactant. Alterations in pulmonary surfactant concentrations or function impair ventilation and cause tissue injury. Identification of the molecular pathways that sense and regulate endogenous alveolar surfactant concentrations, coupled with the ability to pharmacologically modulate them both positively and negatively, would be a major therapeutic advance for patients with acute and chronic lung diseases caused by disruption of surfactant homeostasis. The orphan adhesion GPCR GPR116 (also known as Adgrf5) is a critical regulator of alveolar surfactant concentrations. Here, we show that human and mouse GPR116 control surfactant secretion and reuptake in alveolar type II (AT2) cells by regulating guanine nucleotide–binding domain α q and 11 (Gq/11) signaling. Synthetic peptides derived from the ectodomain of GPR116 activated Gq/11-dependent inositol phosphate conversion, calcium mobilization, and cortical F-actin stabilization to inhibit surfactant secretion. AT2 cell–specific deletion of Gnaq and Gna11 phenocopied the accumulation of surfactant observed in Gpr116–/– mice. These data provide proof of concept that GPR116 is a plausible therapeutic target to modulate endogenous alveolar surfactant pools to treat pulmonary diseases associated with surfactant dysfunction.

Authors

Kari Brown, Alyssa Filuta, Marie-Gabrielle Ludwig, Klaus Seuwen, Julian Jaros, Solange Vidal, Kavisha Arora, Anjaparavanda P. Naren, Kathirvel Kandasamy, Kaushik Parthasarathi, Stefan Offermanns, Robert J. Mason, William E. Miller, Jeffrey A. Whitsett, James P. Bridges

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Figure 9

Model of GPR116-mediated modulation of surfactant homeostasis in alveolar type II cells.

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Model of GPR116-mediated modulation of surfactant homeostasis in alveola...
Present data support a model in which full-length GPR116 is held in an inactive state in the absence of ligand binding to the NTF. Subsequent ligand binding to the NTF fragment, perhaps present in the alveolar lumen, or cell stretch induced by the ventilator cycle induces a conformational change, or complete disengagement of the NTF from the CTF, that permits interaction of the activating CTF ectodomain with the 7TM domains, resulting in receptor activation, Gq/11 coupling, actin rearrangement, and decreased surfactant secretion/increased surfactant uptake. Activating peptides, such as GAP16, bypass the inhibitory effect of the NTF, resulting in receptor activation.

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