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The human angiotensin AT(1) receptor supports G protein-independent extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 activation and cellular proliferation
Authors:Hansen Jakob Lerche  Aplin Mark  Hansen Jonas Tind  Christensen Gitte Lund  Bonde Marie Mi  Schneider Mikael  Haunsø Stig  Schiffer Hans H  Burstein Ethan S  Weiner David M  Sheikh Søren P
Affiliation:Laboratory for Molecular Cardiology, The Danish National Research Foundation Centre for Cardiac Arrhythmia, The Heart Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark. jlhansen@sund.ku.dk
Abstract:The angiotensin AT(1) receptor is a key regulator of blood pressure and body fluid homeostasis, and it plays a key role in the pathophysiology of several cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension, cardiac hypertrophy, congestive heart failure, and arrhythmia. The importance of human angiotensin AT(1) receptor signalling is illustrated by the common use of angiotensin AT(1) receptor-inverse agonists in clinical practice. It is well established that rodent orthologues of the angiotensin AT(1) receptor can selectively signal through G protein-dependent and -independent mechanisms in recombinant expression systems, primary cells and in vivo. The in vivo work clearly demonstrates profoundly different cellular consequences of angiotensin AT(1) receptor signalling in the cardiovascular system, suggesting pharmacological potential for drugs which specifically affect a subset of angiotensin AT(1) receptor actions. However, it is currently unknown whether the human angiotensin AT(1) receptor can signal through G protein-independent mechanisms - and if so, what the physiological impact of such signalling is. We have performed a detailed pharmacological analysis of the human angiotensin AT(1) receptor using a battery of angiotensin analogues and registered drugs targeting this receptor. We show that the human angiotensin AT(1) receptor signals directly through G protein-independent pathways and supports NIH3T3 cellular proliferation. The realization of G protein-independent signalling by the human angiotensin AT(1) receptor has clear pharmacological implications for development of drugs with pathway-specific actions and defined biological outcomes.
Keywords:GPCR   7TM receptor   Differential activation   Angiotensin   Arrestin   AT1 receptor
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