Pharmacological characterisation of native somatostatin receptors in AtT‐20 mouse tumour corticotrophs
- 1 May 2003
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 139 (1) , 109-121
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0705235
Abstract
1. The mouse corticotroph tumour cell line AtT-20 is a useful model to investigate the physiological role of native somatostatin (SRIF, Somatotropin release inhibitory factor) receptor subtypes (sst(1) - sst(5)). The objective of this study was to characterise the pharmacological features and the functional effects of SRIF receptors expressed by AtT-20 cells using radioligand binding and cAMP accumulation. 2. [(125)I]LTT-SRIF-28, [(125)I]CGP 23996, [(125)I]Tyr(10)-cortistatin-14 and [(125)I]Tyr(3)-octreotide labelled SRIF receptor binding sites with high affinity and in a saturable manner (B(max)=315, 274, 239 and 206 fmol mg(-1), respectively). [(125)I]LTT-SRIF-28 labels significantly more sites than [(125)I]Tyr(10) -cortistatin-14 and [(125)I]Tyr(3) -octreotide as seen previously in cells expressing pure populations of sst(2) or sst(5) receptors. 3. SRIF analogues displaced the binding of the four radioligands. sst(2/5) receptor-selective ligands showed much higher affinity than sst(1/3/4) receptor-selective ligands. The binding profile of [(125)I]Tyr(3)-octreotide was different from that of [(125)I]LTT-SRIF-28, [(125)I]CGP 23996 and [(125)I]Tyr(10)-cortistatin-14. The sst(5/1) receptor-selective ligand L-817,818 identified two binding sites, one with subnanomolar affinity (sst(5) receptors) and one with micromolar affinity (sst(2) receptors); however, the proportions were different: 70 - 80% high affinity with [(125)I]LTT-SRIF-28, [(125)I]CGP 23996, [(125)I]Tyr(10)-cortistatin-14, but only 20% with [(125)I]Tyr(3)-octreotide. 4. SRIF analogues inhibited the forskolin-stimulated cAMP levels depending on concentration. sst(2/5) receptor-selective ligands were highly potent, whereas sst(1/3/4) receptor-selective ligands had no significant effects. The sst(2) receptor antagonist D-Tyr(8)-CYN 154806 competitively antagonised the effects of SRIF-14 and sst(2) receptor-preferring agonists, but not those of L-817,818. 5. The complex binding properties of SRIF receptor analogues indicate that sst(2) and sst(5) receptors are the predominant SRIF receptors expressed on AtT-20 cell membranes with no or only negligible presence of sst(1), sst(3) and sst(4) receptors. In the functional studies using cAMP accumulation, only sst(2) and sst(5) receptors appear to play a role. However, the "predominant" receptor appears to be the sst(2) receptor, although sst(5) receptors can also mediate the effect, when the ligand is not able to activate sst(2) receptors. This clearly adds flexibility to SRIF-mediated functional effects and suggests that the physiological role of SRIF and its analogues may be mediated preferentially via one subtype over another.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- Heterodimerization of Somatostatin and Opioid Receptors Cross-modulates Phosphorylation, Internalization, and DesensitizationJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Small molecule somatostatin receptor subtype-2 antagonistsBioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters, 2001
- Somatostatin‐induced control of cytosolic free calcium in pituitary tumour cellsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2000
- Somatostatin and Its Receptor FamilyFrontiers in Neuroendocrinology, 1999
- Nonpeptide Somatostatin Agonists with sst4 Selectivity: Synthesis and Structure−Activity Relationships of ThioureasJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 1998
- The Elusive Nature of Cerebellar Somatostatin Receptors: Studies in Rat, Monkey and Human CerebellumJournal of Receptors and Signal Transduction, 1997
- Cell Cycle Dependent Induction of Apoptosis by Somatostatin Analog SMS 201-995 in AtT-20 Mouse Pituitary CellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1995
- Characterization and distribution of somatostatin SS-1 and SRIF-1 binding sites in rat brain: identitity with SSTR-2 receptorsEuropean Journal of Pharmacology: Molecular Pharmacology, 1995
- Evidence That Receptor‐Linked G Protein Inhibits Exocytosis by a Post‐Second‐Messenger Mechanism in AtT‐20 CellsJournal of Neurochemistry, 1990
- A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye bindingAnalytical Biochemistry, 1976