PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Receptor heteromerization expands the repertoire of cannabinoid signaling in rodent neurons.

  • Raphael Rozenfeld,
  • Ittai Bushlin,
  • Ivone Gomes,
  • Nikos Tzavaras,
  • Achla Gupta,
  • Susana Neves,
  • Lorenzo Battini,
  • G Luca Gusella,
  • Alexander Lachmann,
  • Avi Ma'ayan,
  • Robert D Blitzer,
  • Lakshmi A Devi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029239
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. e29239

Abstract

Read online

A fundamental question in G protein coupled receptor biology is how a single ligand acting at a specific receptor is able to induce a range of signaling that results in a variety of physiological responses. We focused on Type 1 cannabinoid receptor (CB₁R) as a model GPCR involved in a variety of processes spanning from analgesia and euphoria to neuronal development, survival and differentiation. We examined receptor dimerization as a possible mechanism underlying expanded signaling responses by a single ligand and focused on interactions between CB₁R and delta opioid receptor (DOR). Using co-immunoprecipitation assays as well as analysis of changes in receptor subcellular localization upon co-expression, we show that CB₁R and DOR form receptor heteromers. We find that heteromerization affects receptor signaling since the potency of the CB₁R ligand to stimulate G-protein activity is increased in the absence of DOR, suggesting that the decrease in CB₁R activity in the presence of DOR could, at least in part, be due to heteromerization. We also find that the decrease in activity is associated with enhanced PLC-dependent recruitment of arrestin3 to the CB₁R-DOR complex, suggesting that interaction with DOR enhances arrestin-mediated CB₁R desensitization. Additionally, presence of DOR facilitates signaling via a new CB₁R-mediated anti-apoptotic pathway leading to enhanced neuronal survival. Taken together, these results support a role for CB₁R-DOR heteromerization in diversification of endocannabinoid signaling and highlight the importance of heteromer-directed signal trafficking in enhancing the repertoire of GPCR signaling.