Cell-Penetrating Mimics of Agonist-Activated G-Protein Coupled Receptors

2005 
Cell-penetrating peptides have proven themselves as valuable vectors for intracellular delivery. Relatively little is known about the frequency of cell-penetrating sequences in native proteins and their functional role. By computational comparison of peptide sequences, we recently predicted that intracellular loops of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR) have high probability for occurrence of cell-penetrating motifs. Since the loops are also receptor and G-protein interaction sites, we postulated that the short cell-penetrating peptides, derived from GPCR, when applied extracellularly can pass the membrane and modulate G-protein activity similarly to parent receptor proteins. Two model systems were analyzed as proofs of the principle. A peptide based on the C-terminal intracellular sequence of the rat angiotensin receptor (AT1AR) is shown to internalize into live cells and elicit blood vessel contraction even in the presence of AT1AR antagonist Sar1-Thr8-angiotensin II. The peptide interacts with the same selectivity towards G-protein subtypes as agonist-activated AT1AR and blockade of phospholipase C abolishes its effect. Another cell-penetrating peptide, G53-2 derived from human glucagon-like peptide receptor (GLP-1R) is shown to induce insulin release from isolated pancreatic islets. The mechanism was again found to be shared with the original GLP-1R, namely G11-mediated inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate release pathway. These data reveal a novel possibility to mimic the effects of signalling transmembrane proteins by application of shorter peptide fragments.
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