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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 283: R1236-R1244, 2002. First published August 29, 2002; doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00409.2002
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Vol. 283, Issue 5, R1236-R1244, November 2002

beta -Adrenoceptor control of G protein function in the neonate: determinant of desensitization or sensitization

J. T. Auman, F. J. Seidler, and T. A. Slotkin

Department of Pharmacology and Cancer Biology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710

Neonatal beta -adrenoceptors (beta -ARs) are resistant to agonist-induced desensitization. We examined the functioning of Gi and Gs after repeated administration of beta -AR agonists to newborn rats. Isoproterenol (beta 1/beta 2 agonist) obtunded Gi function in the heart but not the liver; in contrast, terbutaline, a beta 2-selective agonist, enhanced Gi function. Isoproterenol, but not terbutaline, increased membrane-associated Gsalpha , which would enhance receptor function. In addition, isoproterenol increased and terbutaline maintained the proportion of the short-splice (S) variant of Gsalpha in the membrane fraction; Gsalpha S is functionally more active than the long-splice variant. Either isoproterenol or terbutaline treatment increased Gsalpha in the cytosolic fraction, a characteristic usually associated with desensitization in the adult. Decreased Gi activity, coupled with increased membrane-associated Gsalpha concentrations and maintenance or increases in membrane Gsalpha S, provide strong evidence that unique effects on G protein function underlie the ability of the immature organism to sustain beta -AR cell signaling in the face of excessive or prolonged stimulation; these mechanisms also contribute to tissue selectivity of the effects of beta -agonists with divergent potencies toward different beta -AR subtypes.

development; heart; isoproterenol; liver; terbutaline


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