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Query: HUMANGGP:013878 (
secretin receptor
)
226
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Secretin
and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) receptors are closely related G protein-coupled receptors in a recently described family possessing a large amino-terminal ectodomain. We postulated that this domain might be critical for agonist recognition and therefore constructed a series of six chimeric receptors, exchanging the amino terminus, the first extracellular loop, or both in secretin and VIP receptors. Constructs were expressed in COS cells and characterized by cAMP generation and binding of both secretin and VIP radio-ligands. Wild type receptors demonstrated high affinity binding of respective ligands (IC50 values (in nM): at the
secretin receptor
: 2.2 for secretin, > 1000 for VIP; at the VIP receptor: 2.2 for VIP, > 1000 for secretin) and appropriately sensitive and selective biological responses (EC50 values (in nM): at the
secretin receptor
: 1.5 for secretin, 127 for VIP; at the VIP receptor: 1.0 for VIP, 273 for secretin). Replacement of the
secretin receptor
amino terminus with that of the VIP receptor resulted in biological responsiveness typical of the VIP receptor (EC50 = 120 nM for secretin, 1.7 nM for VIP). The converse was not true, with this domain of the
secretin receptor
not able to provide the same response when incorporated into the VIP receptor (EC50 = 50 nM for VIP, 30 nM for secretin). The addition of both the first loop and the amino terminus of the
secretin receptor
was effective in yielding a
secretin receptor
-like response (EC50 = 2.0 nM for secretin, 47 nM for VIP). All chimeric constructs expressing selectivity for secretin-stimulated activity bound this hormone with high affinity (IC50 = 0.2-2.2 nM); however, there was divergence between VIP binding and biological activity. Thus, the amino terminus of secretin and VIP receptors plays a key role in agonist recognition and responsiveness, with the first loop playing a critical complementary role for the
secretin receptor
.
...
PMID:Critical contributions of amino-terminal extracellular domains in agonist binding and activation of secretin and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide receptors. Studies of chimeric receptors. 778
[psi 4,5]
Secretin
was shown to be a
secretin receptor
antagonist that inhibits secretin-stimulated increase in adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate in isolated pancreatic acini of the guinea pig. To determine whether it inhibits pancreatic exocrine secretion in vivo, we have studied the effect of [psi 4,5]secretin on the pancreatic secretion stimulated by secretin in anesthetized guinea pigs and rats. In basal state, [psi 4,5]secretin given intravenously for 2 or 3 h in varying doses of 1.6-32.7 nmol.kg-1.h-1 dose dependently increased pancreatic secretion of both fluid and bicarbonate during the 1st h, but it returned gradually to basal level within 2 or 3 h. On the other hand, [psi 4,5]secretin significantly inhibited the pancreatic secretion stimulated by either exogenous or endogenous secretin in a dose-related manner. The inhibitory effect of [psi 4,5]secretin in guinea pigs was greater than that in rats. However, it did not completely block the secretin-stimulated pancreatic secretion, whereas a rabbit antisecretin serum suppressed it completely. We conclude that 1) in the unstimulated state, [psi 4,5]secretin is a partial agonist of pancreatic exocrine secretion of both fluid and bicarbonate; and 2) when pancreatic secretion is stimulated by secretin, unlike an antisecretin serum, it is a partial inhibitor in intact guinea pigs and rats.
...
PMID:Effect of [(CH2NH)4,5]secretin on pancreatic exocrine secretion in guinea pigs and rats. 823 10
The
secretin receptor
is a member of a structurally distinct class of G protein-coupled receptors designated as Class II. The molecular mechanisms of
secretin receptor
signal termination are unknown. Using transiently transfected HEK 293 cells expressing the
secretin receptor
, we investigated its mechanisms of desensitization. Binding of [125I]-secretin to plasma membranes of receptor-expressing cells was specific, with a Kd of 2 nM.
Secretin
evoked an increase in cellular cAMP with an EC50 of 0.4 nM. The response was maximal by 20 min and desensitized rapidly and completely. Immunoprecipitation of a functional, N-terminal epitope-tagged
secretin receptor
was used to demonstrate agonist-dependent receptor phosphorylation, with an EC50 of 14 nM. Pretreatment with protein kinase A or C inhibitors failed to alter secretin-stimulated cAMP accumulation. G protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) are known to be involved in the desensitization of Class I G protein-coupled receptors; therefore, the effect of cotransfection of GRKs on secretin-stimulated cAMP signaling and phosphorylation was evaluated. GRKs 2 and 5 were the most potent at augmenting desensitization, causing a 40% reduction in the maximal cAMP response to secretin. GRK 5 also caused a shift in the EC50 to the right (p < 0.05). GRK 4 and GRK 6 did not alter dose-dependent signaling, and GRK 3 was intermediate in effect. Receptor phosphorylation correlated with desensitization for each GRK studied, whereas second messenger-dependent kinase phosphorylation appeared to be less important in
secretin receptor
signal termination. We demonstrate agonist-dependent
secretin receptor
phosphorylation coincident with profound receptor desensitization of the signaling function in HEK 293 cells, suggesting a role for receptor phosphorylation in this paradigm. Although GRK activity appears important in
secretin receptor
desensitization in HEK 293 cells, protein kinases A and C appear to play only a minor role. These results demonstrate that the GRK-arrestin system regulates Class II G protein-coupled receptors.
...
PMID:A role for receptor kinases in the regulation of class II G protein-coupled receptors. Phosphorylation and desensitization of the secretin receptor. 950 76
Bicarbonate excretion in bile is a major function of the biliary epithelium. It is driven by the apically located Cl-/HCO3- exchanger which is functionally coupled with a cAMP-dependent Cl- channel (CFTR). A number of hormones and/or neuropeptides with different mechanisms and at different intracellular levels regulate, in concert, the processes underlying bicarbonate excretion in the biliary epithelium.
Secretin
induces a bicarbonate rich choleresis by stimulating the activity of the Cl-/HCO3- exchanger by cAMP and protein kinase A mediated phosphorylation of CFTR regulatory domain. Protein phosphatase 1/2A are involved in the run-down of secretory stimulus after secretin removal. Acetylcholine potentiates secretin-choleresis by inducing a Ca(++)-calcineurin mediated "sensitization" of adenyl cyclase to secretin. Bombesin and vasoactive intestinal peptide also enhance the Cl-/HCO3- exchanger activity, but the intracellular signal transduction pathway has not yet been defined. Somatostatin and gastrin inhibit basal and/or secretin-stimulated bicarbonate excretion by down-regulating the
secretin receptor
and decreasing cAMP intracellular levels induced by secretin.
...
PMID:Hormonal regulation of bicarbonate secretion in the biliary epithelium. 962 62
G protein-coupled receptors initiate signaling cascades after associating with heterotrimeric G proteins. This is typically initiated by agonist binding, but can also occur spontaneously, particularly in receptors bearing distinct missense mutations. Two such mutations in the parathyroid hormone receptor are associated with constitutive activity, manifesting clinically as Jansen's metaphyseal chondroplasia. We introduce analogous mutations separately and together into the
secretin receptor
to explore their impact on another family member. Constructs were expressed transiently in COS cells, and had binding and signaling (cAMP generation) studied. Each construct was processed appropriately to lead to cell surface expression and signaling.
Secretin
bound to the wild-type receptor with two affinity states recognized, 1% of sites in the high affinity state (Ki = 0.5 +/- 0.1 nM) and 99% in the low affinity state (Ki = 23 +/- 3 nM). Mutant receptor binding best fit a single affinity state, having values for Ki of 5 +/- 1 nM (H156R), 8 +/- 1 nM (T322P) and 6 +/- 1 nM (H156R/T322P), with each of these demonstrating a shift to higher affinity than the predominent low affinity state of the wild-type receptor. Each mutant receptor expressed small to moderate constitutive activity, with basal levels of cAMP activity greater than control (P < .01): H156R, 1.4-fold; T322P, 4.5-fold and H156R/T322P, 6.8-fold. The level of basal activity of even the most active construct was only 15% of the maximal response of wild-type receptor. Although each of the single site mutants responded to secretin by increasing their cAMP levels in a concentration-dependent manner, the dual mutant decreased its cAMP in response to hormone (EC50 = 13 nM). Thus, a natural agonist had become an inverse agonist at this unique construct. Because this could reflect reduced normal coupling with Gs or increased aberrant coupling with Gi, the mechanism was further explored using pertussis toxin and a stable analogue of GTP. Although ligand-binding determinants were retained in the dual receptor mutant, the conformation of this receptor upon secretin binding effected a reduction in its basal coupling with Gs, thereby resulting in inverse agonism.
...
PMID:Protean effects of a natural peptide agonist of the G protein-coupled secretin receptor demonstrated by receptor mutagenesis. 969 8
Posttranslational processing of preprosecretin generates several COOH-terminally extended forms of secretin and alpha-carboxyl amidated secretin. We used synthetic canine secretin analogs with COOH-terminal -amide, -Gly, or -Gly-Lys-Arg to examine the effects of COOH-terminal extensions of secretin on bioactivity and detection in RIA. Synthetic products were purified by reverse-phase and ion-exchange HPLC and characterized by reverse-phase isocratic HPLC and amino acid, sequence, and mass spectral analyses.
Secretin
and secretin-Gly were noted to coelute during reverse-phase HPLC. In RIA using eight different antisera raised against amidated secretin, COOH-terminally extended secretins had little or no cross-reactivity. Bioactivity was assessed by measuring pancreatic responses in anesthetized rats. Amidated canine and porcine secretins were equipotent.
Secretin
-Gly and secretin-Gly-Lys-Arg had potencies of 81 +/- 9% (P > 0.05) and 176 +/- 13% (P < 0.01), respectively, compared with amidated secretin, and the response to secretin-Gly-Lys-Arg lasted significantly longer. These data demonstrate that 1) amidated secretin and secretin-Gly are not separable under some chromatographic conditions, 2) current RIA may not detect bioactive COOH-terminally extended forms of secretin in tissue extracts or blood, and 3) the
secretin receptor
mediating stimulation of pancreatic secretion recognizes both amidated and COOH-terminally extended secretins.
...
PMID:COOH-terminally extended secretins are potent stimulants of pancreatic secretion. 1019 22
Secretin
is well known for its inhibitory action on gastric motility. It has been reported that secretin in a physiological dose inhibits gastric motility through mediation by the vagal afferent pathway.
Secretin
also elicited relaxation of carbachol-stimulated rat forestomach muscle strips by binding to its receptors, suggesting a direct action on this peripheral tissue. We hypothesized that vagal input may affect the action of secretin by modulating the level of
secretin receptor
in the forestomach. Several treatments, including vagal ligation, vagotomy, perivagal application of capsaicin or colchicine, intravenous infusion of tetrodotoxin, and intraperitoneal injection of atropine, were performed to investigate their effects on
secretin receptor
binding to forestomach membranes. Specific binding of 125I-labeled secretin to forestomach membranes was significantly decreased (45%) by vagal ligation, vagotomy (50%), or perivagal colchicine treatment (40%). On the contrary, specific binding of 125I-secretin was not affected by perivagal capsaicin treatment, intravenous infusion of tetrodotoxin, or intraperitoneal injection of atropine. By Scatchard analysis of the binding data, the capacity of the high-affinity binding sites in forestomach membranes was found to decrease significantly after vagal ligation compared with membranes from the sham-operated group. However, the affinity at the high-affinity binding sites, the binding parameters of the low-affinity binding sites, and binding specificity were not changed. Vagal ligation but not perivagal capsaicin treatment reduced the inhibitory effect of secretin on bethanechol-stimulated contraction of isolated forestomach muscle strips, causing a right shift in the dose-response curve. These results suggest that vagal input through axonal transport plays a significant role on secretin action by modulating the capacity of secretin binding sites (but not affinity or specificity), at least in rat forestomach.
...
PMID:Vagus nerve modulates secretin binding sites in the rat forestomach. 1019 50
The secretin amino terminal residues are essential for high affinity binding to the cognate receptor and for the subsequent activation of adenylate cyclase. It has been already established that two basic residues of the receptor TM 2 are involved in the interaction with aspartate 3 of the ligand. The present work investigated the hypothesis that two conserved tyrosine residues of the TM 1 (Tyrosines 124 and 128) could also participate to the positioning of the amino terminus of the ligand. Tyrosines 124 and 128 were mutated into alanine and histidine residues, and the properties of the mutant receptors, expressed in CHO cells, were compared with those of the wild-type receptor. Mutation of tyrosine 124 to Ala or His decreased the affinity of the receptor for secretin, [Glu3]secretin, [Asn3]secretin and the secretin fragment 2-27, and reduced the intrinsic activity of [Asn3]secretin. Mutation of tyrosine 128 to Ala, but not to His reduced 50-fold secretin and [Asn3]secretin affinity but only 3-fold that of [Glu3]secretin.
Secretin
and [Glu3]Sn were equipotent in that mutant receptor. These results suggested that tyrosine 128 of the
secretin receptor
interacted directly with the [Asp3] residue of secretin and thus that the amino terminal domain of secretin interacts with amino acids buried in both the TM 1 and TM 2 helices.
...
PMID:Mutations of aromatic residues in the first transmembrane helix impair signalling by the secretin receptor. 1041 23
Secretin
is the most potent regulator of pancreatic bicarbonate, electrolyte and volume secretion. In this report, the organization of the human
secretin receptor
(hSR) gene was characterized by overlapping genomic phage clones. The hSR gene consists of 13 exons and 12 introns with all the splice donor and acceptor sites conforming to the canonical GT/AG rule. By transient reporter gene assays, the wild-type promoter, containing 3.0 kb of the hSR gene 5' flanking region, was able to drive 5.8 +/- 0.6 and 6.6 +/- 0.2-fold (P < 0.01) increases in luciferase activities in pancreatic ductule-derived PANC-1 and BPD-1 cells, respectively. By subsequent 5' and 3' deletion analysis, a promoter element was identified within -408 to -158, relative to the ATG codon. This promoter element was found to be cell-specific since it could drive reporter gene expression in PANC-1 and BPD-1 cells but not in Hs 262.St, Hs 746T and alphaT3-1 cells. The study of the transcriptional control of human secretin and its receptor should shed light on the pathological developments of pancreatic cancer and autism in the future.
...
PMID:The human secretin receptor gene: genomic organization and promoter characterization. 1043 74
Secretin
is a 27-amino acid long peptide hormone that regulates pancreatic water, bicarbonate, enzymes, and potassium ion secretion. The human
secretin receptor
(hSR) is a glycoprotein consisting of 440 amino acids, of which there are 5 putative N-linked glycosylation sites at positions Asn72, Asn100, Asn106, Asn128 (N-terminal ectodomain), and Asn291 (second exoloop). Through functional analysis of the hSR-transfected cells cultured in the presence of various glycosylation inhibitors, it was found that tunicamycin and castanospermine were able to significantly reduce the secretin-stimulated cAMP response. On the other hand, the effects of other inhibitors, swainsonine and deoxymannojirimycin, were much lower, suggesting that the high mannose-type carbohydrate side-chain is essential to the expression of a fully functional hSR. The role of individual N-linked glycosylation sites was studied by mutation analysis (Asn to Leu or Ser to Ala) coupled to measurements of cAMP accumulation and extracellular acidification rate. The ED50 values of the wild-type receptor in these two assay systems were 0.25 and 0.11 nM, respectively, and mutation at position 100, 106, or 291 did not affect either the ED50 values or the maximal responses in the two assays. However, the Asn72Leu and Ser74Ala mutations reduced the maximal responses and increased the ED50 values in both assays, suggesting that this site is a true glycosylation signal. This hypothesis was further supported by competitive binding studies, the same mutants were found to be defective in binding with [125I]secretin. To evaluate whether the change in receptor function of the mutants is caused by the change in the process of presenting the receptor to the cell surface, the mutants and the wild-type receptor were tagged with a c-Myc epitope at the C-termini. Using an anti-c-Myc monoclonal antibody and confocal microscopy, all of the mutant receptors were found to be expressed and delivered to the plasma membrane.
...
PMID:Role of N-linked glycosylation on the function and expression of the human secretin receptor. 1053 38
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