An alternatively spliced transcript of the rat nociceptin receptor ORL1 gene encodes a truncated receptor

被引:28
作者
Xie, GX
Ito, E
Maruyama, K
Pietruck, C
Sharma, M
Yu, LC
Palmer, PP
机构
[1] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Anesthesia, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[2] Tokyo Med & Dent Univ, Sch Med, Dept Hyg & Oncol, Tokyo, Japan
来源
MOLECULAR BRAIN RESEARCH | 2000年 / 77卷 / 01期
关键词
alternative splicing; receptor; opioid; nociceptin; orphanin FQ; genomic sequence;
D O I
10.1016/S0169-328X(00)00033-4
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Opioid receptor-like protein ORL1, the receptor for the neuropeptide nociceptin (also named orphanin FQ), has two alternatively spliced isoforms in the rat. This alternative splicing event is generated by retaining of intron 3, 81 bases in length, in the mRNA region encoding the second extracellular loop of ORL1. A full-length rat ORL1 receptor has 367 amino acid residues. However, as revealed by sequencing of rat ORL1 genomic DNA and cDNA, the insertion of the unspliced intron 3 brings in an in-frame stop codon and, therefore, creates a truncated open-reading frame encoding only the N-terminal half of ORL1 (from the N-terminus to an alternate extracellular tail C-terminal to the fourth transmembrane domain). The two alternatively spliced transcripts are differentially expressed in tissues. In transfected mammalian cells, the full-length ORL1 displays high-affinity and selective binding for nociceptin, and inhibits the production of cyclic AMP. In contrast, the truncated ORL1 binds nociceptin and other opioid peptides very poorly and non-selectively (affinity in micromolar range), and it does not mediate any inhibitory effects on cyclic AMP production. Apparently, this truncated ORL1 does not function as a receptor for nociceptin or other ligands tested. Such alternative splicing to create a truncated ORL1 receptor might be an endogenous mechanism to negatively regulate nociceptin/ORL1 functions. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 9
页数:9
相关论文
共 34 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], MED IMMUNOL TOKYO
[2]  
Anton B, 1996, J COMP NEUROL, V368, P229
[3]   MOLECULAR-CLONING AND TISSUE DISTRIBUTION OF A PUTATIVE MEMBER OF THE RAT OPIOID RECEPTOR GENE FAMILY THAT IS NOT A MU-OPIOID, DELTA-OPIOID OR KAPPA-OPIOID RECEPTOR-TYPE [J].
BUNZOW, JR ;
SAEZ, C ;
MORTRUD, M ;
BOUVIER, C ;
WILLIAMS, JT ;
LOW, M ;
GRANDY, DK .
FEBS LETTERS, 1994, 347 (2-3) :284-288
[4]   Agonist-induced signaling and trafficking of the mu-opioid receptor: role of serine and threonine residues in the third cytoplasmic loop and C-terminal domain [J].
Capeyrou, R ;
Riond, J ;
Corbani, M ;
Lepage, JF ;
Bertin, B ;
Emorine, LJ .
FEBS LETTERS, 1997, 415 (02) :200-205
[5]  
Chan JSC, 1998, J NEUROCHEM, V71, P2203
[6]   EXPRESSION OF THE H-RAS PROTO-ONCOGENE IS CONTROLLED BY ALTERNATIVE SPLICING [J].
COHEN, JB ;
BROZ, SD ;
LEVINSON, AD .
CELL, 1989, 58 (03) :461-472
[7]   Nociceptin and its receptor in guinea-pig sympathetic ganglia [J].
Kummer, W ;
Fischer, A .
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1997, 234 (01) :35-38
[8]   Different domains of the ORL1 and κ-opioid receptors are involved in recognition of nociceptin and dynorphin A [J].
Lapalu, S ;
Moisand, C ;
Butour, JL ;
Mollereau, C ;
Meunier, JC .
FEBS LETTERS, 1998, 427 (02) :296-300
[9]   Enhancement of spatial attention in nociceptin orphanin FQ receptor knockout mice [J].
Mamiya, T ;
Noda, Y ;
Nishi, M ;
Takeshima, H ;
Nabeshima, T .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1998, 783 (02) :236-240
[10]   Facilitation of long-term potentiation and memory in mice lacking nociception receptors [J].
Manabe, T ;
Noda, Y ;
Mamiya, T ;
Katagiri, H ;
Houtani, T ;
Nishi, M ;
Noda, T ;
Takahashi, T ;
Sugimoto, T ;
Nabeshima, T ;
Takeshima, H .
NATURE, 1998, 394 (6693) :577-581