G protein-coupled receptors mediate coronary flow-and agonist-induced responses via lectin-oligosaccharide interactions

S Perez-Aguilar, D Torres-Tirado… - American Journal …, 2014 - journals.physiology.org
S Perez-Aguilar, D Torres-Tirado, G Martell-Gallegos, J Velarde-Salcedo…
American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2014journals.physiology.org
Blood flow acts parallel to the coronary luminal endothelial surface layer (LESL) and
modulates multiple parenchymal functions via the release of paracrine agents. Evidence
indicates that the LESL may be a flow-sensing organelle and that perhaps through flow-
induced lectin (L)· oligosaccharide (O) complex formation (L· O) participates in this process.
LESL integrins and selectins are both lectinic and flow sensitive, but the L properties of flow-
sensitive G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are unknown. Therefore, we investigated the …
Blood flow acts parallel to the coronary luminal endothelial surface layer (LESL) and modulates multiple parenchymal functions via the release of paracrine agents. Evidence indicates that the LESL may be a flow-sensing organelle and that perhaps through flow-induced lectin (L)·oligosaccharide (O) complex formation (L·O) participates in this process. LESL integrins and selectins are both lectinic and flow sensitive, but the L properties of flow-sensitive G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are unknown. Therefore, we investigated the presence of L in the LESL and hypothesized that if flow-sensitive GPCRs are L, flow and O will determine their response to receptor activation. The LESL protein fraction isolated from guinea pig hearts was passed through an affinity chromatography column made of three sugars, mannose, galactose, and N-acetylglucosamine, and the lectinic fraction was eluted. Immune dot blot was used to identify L proteins in the LESL fraction. Our results indicate the following. 1) Two-dimensional SDS-PAGE (2D-SDS-PAGE) of the LESL lectinic fraction revealed at least 167 Ls. 2) Among these Ls, we identified three selectins and the GPCRs: angiotensin II, bradykinin (B2-R), adenosine A1 and A2, prolactin, endothelin, α1-adrenergic (α1A-R), thromboxane A2, β1-adrenergic, β3-adrenergic, and insulin receptors; the first six GPCRs are known to be flow sensitive. 3) The amplitude of receptor-induced vascular responses by α1A-R and B2-R activation (phenylephrine or bradykinin, respectively) was a function of flow and O (hyaluronidate). Our results support a novel mechanism of GPCR-mediated responses to flow via L·O interaction.
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