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Volume 17, Number 14,
Issue of July 15, 1997
pp. 5327-5333
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Concurrent Stimulation of Cannabinoid CB1 and Dopamine D2
Receptors Augments cAMP Accumulation in Striatal Neurons: Evidence for
a Gs Linkage to the CB1 Receptor
Michelle Glass and
Christian C. Felder
Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Regulation, National Institute
of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-4090
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Cannabinoids act at the CB1 receptor to inhibit adenylate cyclase
activity via a pertussis toxin-sensitive G-protein. Within the
striatum, CB1 receptors have been shown to be localized on the same
neurons as Gi-coupled dopamine D2 receptors. In this study
we have examined the interactions of CB1 and D2 receptors on adenylate
cyclase. In striatal neurons in primary culture, both the CB1 receptor
agonist
[3-(1,1-dimethylheptyl)-11-hydroxy- 8tetrahydrocannabinol]
(HU210) and the D2 receptor agonist quinpirole inhibited
forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation when applied separately. In
contrast, HU210 and quinpirole in combination augmented cAMP
accumulation. This augmentation was blocked by the CB1 receptor antagonist SR141716A or the D2 antagonist sulpride. Pertussis toxin
treatment of striatal neurons prevented the inhibition of cAMP
accumulation by D2 receptors but unmasked a cannabinoid
receptor-mediated stimulatory effect on cAMP accumulation. The
cannabinoid receptor-stimulated accumulation of cAMP was blocked in a
concentration-dependent manner by SR141716A, suggesting that the
response was regulated through the CB1 receptor. Similar augmentation
of cAMP accumulation after pertussis toxin treatment was observed in
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells transfected with, and stably
expressing, the CB1 receptor. This stimulation of cAMP was not
Ca2+-sensitive and was unaffected by a range of
protein kinase inhibitors. Treatment of the pertussis toxin-treated
cells with cholera toxin before CB1 receptor activation amplified the
stimulatory pathway, suggesting that this response was mediated through
a Gs-type G-protein. Stimulation of cAMP accumulation was
not observed after pertussis toxin treatment of CHO cells expressing
the human CB2 receptor, suggesting that this novel signaling pathway is
unique to the cannabinoid CB1 receptor.
Key words:
cannabinoid;
G-protein;
adenylate cyclase;
CB1 receptor;
dopamine;
D2 receptor;
striatum
INTRODUCTION
Cannabinoids exert many of their effects
through activation of Gi-protein-coupled receptors. Two
subtypes of cannabinoid receptors have been identified. The CB1
receptor (Matsuda et al., 1990 ) is distributed predominantly in the CNS
and testis (Matsuda et al., 1990 ; Gerard et al., 1991 ; Westlake et al.,
1994 ), and the CB2 receptor (Munro et al., 1993 ) is localized in
peripheral tissue, including the marginal zone of the spleen (Munro et
al., 1993 ). Within the CNS, the CB1 receptor is localized densely in
the basal ganglia (Herkenham et al., 1991a , b; Glass et al., 1997b ),
and a role for cannabinoids in normal and abnormal physiology of basal ganglia function is emerging (for review, see Glass et al., 1997a ). Within the striatum, the CB1 receptor has been localized to the medium
spiny neurons (Herkenham et al., 1991a ) that act as the major output
neurons of the striatum. Medium spiny neurons can be divided in two
subclasses based on where their projections terminate and based on
their neuropeptide content (Beckstead and Kearsey, 1985 ; Beckstead and
Cruz, 1986 ; Gimenez-Amaya and Graybiel, 1990 ). One population of
neurons releases substance P and projects to the substantia nigra,
whereas the other subset contains enkephalin and projects to the globus
pallidus (Graybiel, 1990 ). The two populations also contain different
populations of dopamine receptors. Dopamine D1 receptors are localized
predominantly on neurons releasing substance P, and dopamine D2
receptors are localized on enkephalin releasing neurons (Le Moine et
al., 1991 ). CB1 receptors have been identified on both subpopulations
of medium spiny neurons (Mailleux and Vanderhaeghen, 1992 ).
Previous studies have demonstrated the functional coupling of CB1
receptors to the inhibition of adenylate cyclase and voltage-dependent calcium channels via pertussis toxin-sensitive G-proteins (Felder et
al., 1992 ; Mackie and Hille, 1992 ). Both D1 and D2 dopamine receptors
also couple to adenylate cyclase via G-proteins. Dopamine D1 receptors
stimulate adenylate cyclase via Gs-proteins (Monsma et al.,
1990 ), whereas dopamine D2 receptors inhibit adenylate cyclase via
Gi-proteins (Sibley and Monsma, 1992 ). Although there is
evidence for associations between the actions of cannabinoids and
dopamine within the striatum (for review, see Glass et al., 1997a ),
signaling interactions between these receptors have not been
investigated extensively. Previously, CB1 receptors have been shown to
inhibit D1 receptor-mediated cAMP accumulation (Bidaut-Russell and
Howlett, 1991 ). However, an interaction between D2 and CB1 receptors
has not been established. We now report that concurrent activation of
D2 and CB1 receptors results in an increase in cAMP accumulation in
contrast to the inhibition of cAMP accumulation normally observed with
activation of either receptor alone. We suggest that these data
demonstrate a novel pathway in which the CB1 receptor couples to a
Gs-protein, indicating that cannabinoid receptor function
may be more complex than the simple Gi linkage described
previously.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Cell Culture
Primary striatal culture. Striatum was dissected from
embryonic rat pups on embryonic day 18 (E18) and placed in D1 saline (100 U/ml papain, 100 mM CaCl2, 50 mM EDTA, and 1.5 mM NaOH) for 15 min at 37°C,
washed for 5 min with 10FC [10% fetal calf serum, 50 U/ml
penicillin/streptomycin, 4 mM glutamine in minimum
essential media (MEM) containing 2.5 mg/ml trypsin inhibitor and 2.5 mg/ml bovine serum albumin (BSA)]. Cells were then dissociated in 10FC and plated at 3 million/well in six-well plates in neurobasal media
(B27 supplement, Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD; 0.5 mM L-glutamine; and 25 µM
glutamate) on a confluent background of astrocytes. Astrocytes were
prepared identically but plated in 10FC. Confluent astrocyte cultures
were treated with 6.6 µg/ml 5 fluoro-2 deoxyurindine (mitotic
inhibitor). Neurons were fed with neurobasal media without glutamate on
days 3 and 7, and cAMP assays were performed between days 4 and 8. All
cell culture media were obtained from BioWhittaker (Walkersville,
MD).
Chinese hamster ovary (CHO)-K1 cells were obtained from American Type
Culture Collection (Rockville, MD) and maintained as described
previously (Felder et al., 1990 ). The human cannabinoid CB1 and CB2
receptor cDNA were expressed stably in CHO cells as described
previously (Felder et al., 1992 ). CHO cells stably expressing the D2
receptor were provided generously by Dr. David Sibley (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, Bethesda, MD).
Assay of cAMP accumulation. Measurement of cAMP accumulation
was performed as described previously with the following modifications (Felder et al., 1990 ). All ligands were diluted in silonized-glass test
tubes with Eagle's No. 2 media containing 50 mg/ml fatty acid-free
BSA. The final BSA concentration was 5 mg/ml. Assays were performed in
silonized glass, with ~4 × 105
cells/0.25 ml final assay volume, over a period of 5 min
at 37°C. The reaction was stopped with the addition of an equal
volume of 0.1N HCl, after which 50 µl was removed for
radioimmunoassay of cAMP as described previously (Felder et al., 1990 ).
HU210 and HU211 were provided generously by Dr. Raphael Mechoulam
(Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel). SR141716A was provided by the National Institute of Drug Abuse (Rockville, MD). Quinpirole and sulpride were obtained from Research Biochemicals International (Natick, MA). The cells were washed twice and suspended in calcium-free Eagle's No. 2 media with 0.5 mM EGTA to determine the role
of extracellular calcium on cAMP accumulation. The role of
intracellular calcium was determined by pretreatment in the above
buffer with 1 mM ATP for 10 min at 37°C to deplete
intracellular calcium stores (Singer-Lahat et al., 1996 ). The ATP was
removed by washing, and the cells were suspended in the calcium-free
media. When required, cells were treated overnight with pertussis toxin
(5 ng/ml; Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA). Treatment with cholera toxin (2 µg/ml; Calbiochem) was performed in serum-free -MEM for 1 hr
before the start of the experiment. The possible involvement of protein
kinases was examined using selected inhibitors (Calbiochem) at the
concentrations shown in Table 1. Cells were preincubated
with the inhibitors in the assay buffer for 10 min at 37°C before the
addition of forskolin and HU210.
Table 1.
Effect of extracellular calcium removal or intracellular
calcium depletion on cAMP accumulation
|
Untreated
|
Pertussis toxin-treated
|
| Control |
No Ca2+-ex |
No Ca2+
in/ex |
Control |
No Ca2+ ex |
No Ca2+ in/ex
|
|
| Basal |
3.3 ± 0.6 |
3.1
± 0.2 |
2.8 ± 0.5 |
2.8 ± 0.1 |
2.9 ± 0.3 |
3.0
± 0.1 |
| 50 nM FSK |
46.0 ± 2.7 |
40.5
± 2.8 |
20.9 ± 1.8 |
20.2 ± 2.0 |
15.8 ± 1.2 |
11.2
± 1.0 |
| + 1 µM HU210 |
4.7 ± 0.2 |
4.7
± 0.3 |
4.4 ± 0.3 |
51.2 ± 4.9 |
37.8 ± 2.5 |
26.9
± 3.0 |
|
|
|
Table 2.
Effect of protein kinase inhibitors on cAMP accumulation
|
cAMP accumulation (pmol/mL)
|
| Untreated |
PTX-treated |
|
| Basal |
2.9
± 0.1 |
2.8 ± 0.2 |
| 50 nM Fsk |
30.4
± 1.9 |
16.4 ± 0.6 |
| Fsk + 1 µM HU210 |
3.9
± 0.1 |
32.0 ± 0.7 |
| + 100 nM
bisindolylmaleimide I (PKC) |
4.0 ± 0.2 |
34.5 ± 2.7 |
| +
100 nM H89 (PKA) |
4.0 ± 0.2 |
30.4 ± 2.1
|
| +1 µM KT5823 (PKG) |
5.2 ± 0.1 |
26.5
± 1.7 |
| + 10 nM KT5926 (MLCK) |
4.0
± 0.3 |
29.6 ± 1.1 |
| + 1 µM KN93 (CaM kinase
II) |
3.8 ± 0.1 |
28.6 ± 0.1 |
| + 100 nm staurosporine
(broad spectrum) |
4.0 ± 0.3 |
29.4 ± 0.3 |
|
|
|
Measurement of intracellular calcium concentration in single
fura-2-loaded cells. Cells grown on glass coverslips coated with Vitrogen (300 µg/ml; Collagen Corp., Palo Alto, CA) were loaded with
5 µM fura-2/AM ester (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) for
30 min at 37°C. Fura-2 fluorescence was measured using an intensified CCD video camera at an emission wavelength of 510 nM in
single cells mounted on a Nikon (Melville, NY) Diaphot microscope
illuminated alternately with 340 and 380 nm light (bandpass 4 nm),
using a SLM-AMINCO (Urbana, IL) DMX-1000 spectroflourometer and
Universal Imaging (West Chester, PA) Metafluor software.
RESULTS
Interaction of dopamine and cannabinoid receptors in primary
striatal culture
Primary striatal cultures from E18 rats were tested functionally
for the presence of cannabinoid CB1 and dopamine D2 receptors. As shown
in Figure 1, the CB1 receptor agonist HU210 and the
dopamine D2 receptor agonist quinpirole both inhibited cAMP
accumulation in primary striatal culture. The inhibition of cAMP
accumulation was blocked by either the CB1 receptor antagonist
SR141716A (1 µM) or the D2 receptor antagonist sulpride
(1 µM), respectively (Fig. 1). CB1 and D2 receptors were
then activated simultaneously in the presence of forskolin to determine
whether the inhibitory responses were synergistic. In contrast to the
data shown in Figure 1, activation of CB1 receptors in the presence of
quinpirole resulted in a dose-dependent augmentation of cAMP
accumulation (Fig. 2). The augmentation of cAMP
accumulation was blocked completely by either SR141716A (1 µM) or sulpride (1 µM)(data not shown).
Fig. 1.
Effect of CB1 and D2 agonists on
forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation in primary striatal cultured
neurons. Forskolin-stimulated (50 nM) cAMP accumulation was
measured in primary culture of the striatum in the presence or absence
of quinpirole (100 nM) and HU210 (1 µM) as described in Materials and Methods. The
inhibition of cAMP accumulation by these compounds was blocked by the
D2 receptor antagonist sulpride (1 µM) or the CB1
antagonist SR141716A (1 µM), respectively. Data are the
mean ± SEM of at least three experiments performed in duplicate.
One hundred percent accumulation is equivalent to 39 ± 8.5 pmol/mg cAMP.
[View Larger Version of this Image (28K GIF file)]
Fig. 2.
Effect of concurrent activation of D2 and CB1
receptors on cAMP accumulation in primary striatal culture.
Forskolin-stimulated (50 nM) cAMP accumulation was measured
in primary striatal culture as described in Materials and Methods in
combination with 100 nM quinpirole and increasing
concentrations of HU210. HU210 reversed the quinpirole-mediated
inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation in a
concentration-dependent manner to levels above that demonstrated with
forskolin alone (EC50 = 6.1 ± 1.2 nM). The stimulation of cAMP accumulation in the presence of forskolin and
quinpirole at 1 µM HU210 was blocked by 1 µM SR141716A. Data are the mean ± SEM of at least
three experiments performed in duplicate.
[View Larger Version of this Image (23K GIF file)]
Cells were treated overnight with pertussis toxin to determine the
contribution of Gi to the interaction of CB1 and D2
receptors. Pertussis toxin treatment uncouples receptors from
Gi-proteins by catalyzing ADP ribosylation of the
-subunit thereby preventing the activation of the G-protein. After
overnight treatment of the primary striatal cultures with pertussis
toxin (5 mg/ml), quinpirole no longer inhibited forskolin-stimulated
cAMP accumulation (data not shown). In contrast, HU210 stimulated a
concentration-dependent increase in the forskolin-stimulated
accumulation of cAMP that was prevented with SR141716A (1 µM), consistent with a CB1 receptor-mediated mechanism
(Fig. 3A).
Fig. 3.
Effect of pertussis toxin on HU210-mediated
inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation in primary
striatal culture (A) and CHO-hCB1 cells
(B). Forskolin-stimulated (50 nM)
cAMP accumulation was measured in primary striatal culture and CHO-hCB1 as described in Materials and Methods. Pertussis toxin
(+PTX;5 ng/ml) was added ~18 hr before the measurement
of cAMP accumulation. In the absence of pertussis toxin, HU210
inhibited forskolin-stimulated cAMP (A, EC50 = 4.6 ± 1.2 nM; B, EC50 = 0.17 ± 0.01 nM). After pertussis toxin treatment,
HU210 resulted in an increase in forskolin-stimulated cAMP
(A, EC50 = 1.2 ± 1.1 nM;
B, EC50 = 1.6 ± 0.04 nM). Both
the inhibition and the stimulation of cAMP were prevented by concurrent exposure to 1 µM SR141716A (open symbols).
Data are the mean ± SEM of at least three experiments performed
in triplicate. One hundred percent accumulation is equivalent to
A, 39 ± 8.5 pmol/ml; B, 39.4 ± 3 pmol/ml.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
cAMP accumulation in CHO cells transfected with the human
CB1 receptor
CB1 receptor stimulation of cAMP accumulation was investigated
further in a clonal CHO cell line stably expressing the human CB1
receptor (CHO-hCB1). In these cells, HU210 demonstrated a high-potency
concentration-dependent inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP
accumulation (Fig. 3B). As seen in the primary striatal
cultures, overnight treatment with pertussis toxin abolished the
inhibitory response and unmasked an HU210-dependent increase in cAMP
accumulation above forskolin-stimulated levels (Fig. 3B).
This stimulation was blocked by SR141716A (1 µM).
Pertussis toxin treatment of CHO cells expressing either CB2 or D2
receptors abolished receptor-mediated modulation of cAMP in these cells
but did not result in an increase in cAMP accumulation (data not
shown), indicating that the stimulatory response is not common to all
Gi-linked receptors.
Several controls were used to ensure that the accumulation of cAMP in
pertussis toxin-treated CHO-hCB1 cells was mediated by the CB1
receptor. HU211, the inactive enantiomer of HU210, failed to produce
any effect on forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation in CHO-hCB1 (data
not shown). Furthermore, HU210 did not alter cAMP accumulation in
nontransfected CHO-K1 cells (data not shown). Cannabinoids have been
reported to exert a number of nonreceptor-mediated effects (Razdan,
1986 ; Felder et al., 1992 ). Experiments were performed to ensure that
the interaction observed between CB1 and D2 receptors in cultured
neurons was not attributable to HU210 altering the ability of the D2
receptor to inhibit cAMP. In CHO cells expressing only the dopamine D2
receptor, HU210 (1 µM) did not influence the inhibition
of forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation by quinpirole (data not
shown).
The coupling of the CB1 receptor to stimulation of cAMP accumulation
may be mediated through the stimulatory protein Gs- . Gs- and forskolin have been shown to be synergistic in
their activation of adenylate cyclase (Downs and Aurbach, 1982 ;
Barovsky and Brooker, 1985 ). Consistent with this activity, in the
presence of pertussis toxin, enhanced cAMP accumulation was observed
when HU210 and forskolin were added together, compared with the level of stimulation observed when each agent was added alone (Fig. 4A). Cholera toxin, which selectively
ADP ribosylates and constitutively activates Gs-
subunits, provides a mechanism to demonstrate turnover of
Gs-proteins (Gill and Meren, 1978 ). The Gs-
subunits only become available as a substrate for the toxin as they are released from the heterotrimeric G-protein, such as occurs after receptor stimulation. Therefore, after preincubation with cholera toxin, stimulation of receptors coupled to Gs releases subunits, enabling them to be activated permanently by cholera toxin,
and resulting in amplification of agonist-dependent increases in cAMP accumulation. As shown in Figure 4B, cholera toxin
treatment increased basal levels of cAMP, and this increase was
partially inhibited by HU210. At higher concentrations of HU210 a
reversal of the inhibition of cAMP accumulation was observed,
suggesting an underlying stimulatory component. Therefore, the same
experiment was performed in the presence of pertussis toxin to remove
the HU210-mediated inhibition of cholera toxin-stimulated cAMP
accumulation (Fig. 4C). In the presence of pertussis toxin,
HU210 enhanced the cholera toxin response, indicating mediation through
Gs.
Fig. 4.
Evidence suggesting a Gs linkage for
the CB1 receptor. A, CHO-hCB1 cells were treated
overnight with pertussis toxin. HU210 did not affect basal levels of
cAMP accumulation in the absence of forskolin. Increasing
concentrations of forskolin resulted in an amplification of
HU210-induced cAMP accumulation above forskolin levels. Data are
mean ± SEM from a representative experiment. B,
cAMP levels after pretreatment with cholera toxin. Cholera toxin results in
an increase in basal cAMP accumulation. HU210 stimulation in the
absence of forskolin resulted in a U-shaped concentration response
curve, with inhibition at lower doses but stimulation at high doses.
Data are mean ± SEM from a representative experiment.
C, Cells were treated overnight with pertussis toxin before treatment with cholera toxin. An amplified signal was observed after cholera toxin treatment (+PTX/CTX),
compared with pertussis treatment (+PTX) alone.
All experiments were performed in the absence of forskolin. Data are
mean ± SEM from a representative experiment.
[View Larger Version of this Image (12K GIF file)]
Additional mechanisms of regulation of the CB1 receptor-mediated
stimulatory response were investigated. Removal of extracellular calcium or depletion of intracellular calcium stores had no effect on
the inhibitory or stimulatory responses mediated through the CB1
receptor (Table 1). A spectrum of protein kinase inhibitors also had no
effect on the inhibitory or stimulatory responses mediated through the
CB1 receptor (Table 2). Furthermore, no calcium
mobilization was observed at the concentrations of HU210, which produce
stimulation of cAMP accumulation in pertussis toxin-treated cells.
Cannabinoid agonists have been shown previously to stimulate a
receptor-independent release of calcium from intracellular stores at
high concentrations, suggesting a nonspecific pharmacological effect
(Felder et al., 1992 ). Overnight incubation with pertussis toxin (5 ng/ml) did not alter the receptor-independent calcium-mobilizing effects of 50 µM HU210.
DISCUSSION
This study has examined the interactions between cannabinoid CB1
and dopamine D2 receptors within the striatum. Activation of either CB1
or D2 receptors in primary striatal culture resulted in an inhibition
of cAMP accumulation. In contrast, simultaneous activation of both
receptors resulted in an augmentation of cAMP accumulation. Pertussis
toxin treatment of striatal neurons prevented the inhibition of
adenylate cyclase by both CB1 and D2 receptors and unmasked a CB1 but
not D2 receptor-mediated stimulation of cAMP accumulation. This
stimulation of cAMP accumulation after pertussis toxin treatment
exhibited a similar EC50 to that observed with concurrent
CB1 and D2 receptor stimulation and was blocked with the CB1 receptor
antagonist SR141716A. These results suggest the existence of an
alternate CB1 receptor-mediated signaling pathway involving the
stimulation of adenylate cyclase. Previous studies have described
cannabinoid agonist-mediated increases in cAMP accumulation (for
review, see Martin et al., 1994 ). However, in these studies,
accumulation of cAMP occurred only at high micromolar concentrations of
the cannabinoids and were likely attributable to the
membrane-perturbing effects of these hydrophobic compounds (Hillard and
Bloom, 1983 ) and not mediated through the CB1 receptor (Felder et al.,
1992 ). The cannabinoid agonist-mediated accumulation of cAMP described
in this study occurred at low, pharmacologically relevant
concentrations of the agonist and were blocked by a CB1 receptor
antagonist, indicating a receptor-mediated pathway.
Transfected cell lines stably expressing the human CB1 receptor have
proven to be useful models in understanding the molecular pharmacology
of cannabinoid receptors (Felder et al., 1992 , 1995 ; Vogel et al.,
1993 ). In CB1 receptor-transfected CHO cells, HU210 potently inhibited
cAMP accumulation. Pertussis toxin treatment prevented the inhibition
of adenylate cyclase and unmasked a concentration-dependent accumulation of cAMP, similar to that seen in striatal neurons. The
cannabinoid-mediated accumulation of cAMP in CHO-hCB1 cells was
prevented by SR141716A, confirming that it was mediated by the CB1
receptor. Pertussis toxin treatment of CHO cells expressing two other
Gi-linked receptors, the human CB2 receptor and the dopamine D2 receptor, blocked the ability of these receptors to inhibit
cAMP accumulation but did not result in any receptor-mediated accumulation of cAMP, suggesting that the stimulatory pathway is a
novel signaling pathway associated with the CB1 receptor rather than a
common feature of Gi-linked receptors.
The ability of cholera toxin and forskolin to amplify the CB1
receptor-mediated accumulation of cAMP supports a role for
Gs-proteins in the stimulatory response (Gill and Meren,
1978 ; Downs and Aurbach, 1982 ; Barovsky and Brooker, 1985 ). The
requirement for pertussis toxin pretreatment to unmask the stimulation
fully suggests that the coupling of the CB1 receptor to Gs
is less efficient than its coupling to Gi. It is possible
that D2 receptor activation could enhance the coupling of CB1 receptors
to Gs, by altering the ratio of Gi-
versus Gs-proteins available to the CB1 receptor. However,
the relatively high abundance of Gi-proteins compared with
Gs-proteins makes this possibility unlikely. Alternatively, D2 receptor stimulation may provide a mechanism for amplification of
the CB1 receptor-coupled Gs signal through the release of
 -subunits. G-protein  -subunits can increase
G s stimulation of type II and type IV adenylate cyclase
(Feinstein et al., 1991 ; Gao and Gilman, 1991 ). Therefore, stimulation
of D2 receptors would result in the release of Gi and
 -subunits, and the  -subunits in concert with CB1 stimulated
G s would result in stimulation of cAMP as the dominant
response.
G-protein coupled receptors have been shown previously to couple to
more than one G-protein (Law et al., 1993 ; Wu et al., 1993 ; Chabre et
al., 1994 ; Wang et al., 1995 ; Herrlich et al., 1996 ). For example, C10,
C4, and C2 subclones of the -2 adrenergic receptor couple to
Gi- and Gs-proteins (Eason et al., 1992 ). D1 receptors couple to Gs- and Gq-proteins in the
striatum (Wang et al., 1995 ) and kidney (Felder et al., 1989 ). The
coupling of CB1 but not CB2 receptors to Gs observed in
this study suggests that these receptors differ in their ability to
couple to G-proteins and signaling effectors. This is consistent with
the finding that CB1 receptors, but not CB2 receptors, couple to Q-type
calcium channels and inwardly rectifying potassium channels in
transfected AtT-20 cells (Felder et al., 1995 ). Thus, whereas their
pharmacological profiles suggest similar ligand-binding properties, the
intracellular responses to activation of either receptor are largely
different. CB1 and CB2 receptors demonstrate 68% sequence homology at
the active site, but only 44% homology overall (Munro et al., 1993 ). Previous studies have demonstrated the third intracellular loop to be
important for receptor-G-protein coupling (Kobilka et al., 1988 ;
Liggett et al., 1991 ; Okamoto et al., 1991 ; Liu and Wess, 1996 ). This
region is substantially larger in the CB1 receptor than in the CB2
receptor (Munro et al., 1993 ), suggesting that this may be a useful
area for future consideration of the molecular determinants for
Gs coupling to receptors.
At least eight subtypes of adenylate cyclase have been identified (for
review, see Cooper et al., 1995 ) and although all eight types can be
activated by Gs, alternative mechanisms of
activation also exist for certain subtypes. For example, protein kinase
C (PKC) stimulates type II and VII adenylate cyclase, whereas
Ca2+ stimulates type I, III, and VIII but inhibits
type V and VI. We investigated whether either of these mechanisms could
explain the CB1-mediated accumulation of cAMP after pertussis toxin
treatment. Neither inhibition of PKC nor depletion of calcium
influenced the ability of HU210 to stimulate adenylate cyclase in
pertussis toxin-treated CHO-hCB1 cells. Furthermore, in agreement with
previous studies (Felder et al., 1992 ), HU210 did not seem to induce
the mobilization of intracellular Ca2+ at the
concentrations used in this study.
The stimulation of cAMP after concurrent activation of CB1 and D2
receptors suggests a possible physiological relevance for the coupling
of CB1 to Gs. Increasing evidence indicates that a single
receptor subtype may be linked to the formation of multiple, parallel,
intracellular signals. This spectrum of heterogenous effectors may be
produced through activation of one or several G-proteins. However, it
is unlikely that all the signals driven by a single receptor subtype
are equally operative under all circumstances, but as evidenced in this
study, it seems that the functional weight of one pathway relative to
another can be altered by interactions with other receptors. The
specificity of these receptor interactions requires further study. For
example, does the CB1 receptor interact with just D2 receptors or with
all Gi-coupled receptors? Discriminatory interactions
between the CB1 receptor and other Gi-linked receptors would provide a mechanism for differential G-protein and effector coupling of the CB1 receptor in different regions of the brain, based
on which other receptors are colocalized on the same neurons. Such
interactions would provide an additional mechanism for discrete regulation of neurotransmitter signals, beyond the receptor subtype specificity.
FOOTNOTES
Received Jan. 29, 1997; revised April 14, 1997; accepted May 6, 1997.
M.G. is supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the Health Research
Council of New Zealand. We thank Dr. J. K. Northup for helpful
discussions.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Christian C. Felder, Lilly
Research Laboratories, Eli Lilly Corporate Center, Indianapolis, IN
46285.
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