PaperPlayer biorxiv pharmacology and toxicology

Functional Evidence for Biased Inhibition of G protein Signaling by YM-254890 in Human Coronary Artery Endothelial Cells


Listen Later

Link to bioRxiv paper:
http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.08.12.248468v1?rss=1
Authors: Peng, Q., Alqahtani, S., Nasrullah, M. Z. A., Shen, J.
Abstract:
Small molecular chemicals targeting individual subtype of G proteins including Gs, Gi/o and Gq has been lacking, except for pertussis toxin being an established selective peptide inhibitor of the Gi/o protein. Recently, a cyclic depsipeptide compound YM-254890 isolated from culture broth of Chromobacterium sp. was reported as a selective inhibitor for the Gq protein by blocking GDP exchange of GTP on the subunit of Gq complex. However, functional selectivity of YM-254890 towards various G proteins was not fully characterized, primarily due to its restricted availability before 2017. Here, using human coronary artery endothelial cells as a model, we performed a systemic pharmacological evaluation on the functional selectivity of YM- 254890 on multiple G protein-mediated receptor signaling. First, we confirmed that YM-254890, at 30 nM, abolished UTP-activated P2Y2 receptor- mediated Ca2+ signaling and ERK1/2 phosphorylation, indicating its potent inhibition on the Gq protein. However, we unexpectedly found that YM-254890 also significantly suppressed cAMP elevation and ERK1/2 phosphorylation induced by multiple Gs-coupled receptors including {beta}2-adrenegic, adenosine A2 and PGI2 receptors. Surprisingly, although YM-254890 had no impact on CXCR4/Gi/o protein-mediated suppression of cAMP production, it abolished ERK1/2 activation. Further, no cellular toxicity was observed for YM-254890, and it neither affected A23187- or thapsigargin-induced Ca2+ signaling, nor forskolin-induced cAMP elevation and growth factor-induced MAPK signaling. We conclude that YM-254890 is not a selective inhibitor for Gq protein; instead, it acts as a broad spectrum inhibitor for Gq and Gs proteins and exhibits a biased inhibition on Gi/o signaling, without affecting non-GPCR-mediated cellular signaling.
Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

PaperPlayer biorxiv pharmacology and toxicologyBy Multimodal LLC