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MODEL ORGANISMS AND COMPARATIVE FUNCTIONAL GENOMICS
-adrenergic Na+/H+ exchanger in trout erythrocytes is controlled by a novel
3-AR subtype
Department of Biology, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1N 6N5
Submitted 21 March 2003 ; accepted in final form 23 May 2003
| ABSTRACT |
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-Adrenoceptors (
-ARs) are seven-transmembrane domain, G
protein-coupled receptors that transduce the cellular effects of epinephrine
and norepinephrine and play a pivotal role in the vertebrate stress response.
This study reports the cloning and characterization of two previously
unreported
-ARs from the rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).
Phylogenetic analysis of amino acid sequences indicates that both
-ARs
are homologs of the mammalian
3-AR. Analysis of tissue
expression patterns indicates that one of these trout
3-adrenoceptors (
3a-AR) is highly expressed
in gill and heart, whereas the second (
3b-AR) is highly
expressed by red blood cells (RBC). Expression of the
3b-AR
in the RBC coupled with the finding of a single category of
-AR binding
sites on RBC membranes provides strong evidence for the control of the trout
RBC
-AR Na+/H+ exchanger (
-NHE) activity by
signaling through this
3b-subtype and not through a
1-subtype as previously proposed. The RBC-specific trout
3b-AR exhibits binding characteristics that distinguish this
receptor from each of the three pharmacologically defined categories of
mammalian
-ARs (
1-,
2-, and
3-AR). This study is the first to report the presence of a
3-AR subtype in a fish species, and the proposal that the
3b-AR controls RBC
-NHE activity represents a novel
role for the
3-AR subtype in vertebrates.
molecular sequence; tissue expression; evolutionary analysis; binding kinetics;
-adrenoceptors
-ADRENOCEPTORS (
-ar) ARE HEPTAHELICAL, G
protein-coupled receptors that play a pivotal role in the vertebrate stress
response by transducing the cellular effects of the catecholamines epinephrine
(Epi) and norepinephrine (NE)
(17,
20,
37). The typical
-AR
signal transduction pathway leads ultimately to increased protein kinase A
(PKA) activity and activation of specific cellular enzymes by phosphorylation
(16,
17). Activation of specific
cellular enzymes in turn produces a suite of tissue-specific responses aimed
at assisting the organism in coping with various environmental and
physiological stressors (9,
28,
33).
Despite their importance in the vertebrate stress response, our knowledge
of
-ARs from nonmammalian vertebrates is based on relatively few
studies. This is particularly true at the molecular level, where only a
handful of studies describe nonmammalian
-ARs
(5,
6,
24,
46). In certain organisms,
novel tissue
-AR responses have evolved that assist these organisms in
coping with a specific set of environmental/physiological stressors. Owing to
their unique characteristics, some of these novel tissue
-AR responses
from nonmammalian species have attracted considerable attention. For example,
the
-AR Na+/H+ exchanger (
-NHE) system found
in the rainbow trout red blood cell (RBC)
(3) has been extensively
studied physiologically, and this system has become one of the most
well-characterized nonmammalian
-AR-mediated responses (for reviews, see
Refs. 22,
25). In trout, catecholamines
are able to augment hemoglobin/oxygen-binding affinity by increasing RBC
intracellular pH through typical
-AR signaling
(3,
13,
25,
32). Activation of the trout
RBC
-AR leads to accumulation of cAMP and activation of PKA that in turn
activates
-NHE by phosphorylation
(2,
3,
19). Once activated, the
-NHE extrudes H+ from the RBC in exchange for Na+,
resulting in alkalization of the cytoplasm. This increase in RBC intracellular
pH, in turn, enhances the affinity of hemoglobin for O2 and allows
for increased oxygen transport by the blood (for reviews, see Refs.
25,
27,
31). The results of previous
pharmacological studies of this novel system suggested that a
1-AR subtype controls the activity of the
-NHE
(41). Much of the attention
directed at this trout RBC system has focused on characterizing its novel
-NHE, which is the only known form of NHE to be activated by a cAMP/PKA
pathway (3). Despite the
critical role played by the
-AR, no molecular data exist describing the
RBC
-AR, and the previous
1-subtype classification of
the trout RBC receptor remains uncorroborated at the molecular level.
Thus the aim of this study was to broaden our knowledge of the rainbow
trout
-AR gene family in general and to provide molecular evidence for
the specific
-AR subtype in the trout RBC. Here we present the
characterization of two previously unreported
-AR genes from the rainbow
trout. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that these two newly cloned trout
-ARs are homologous to the mammalian
3-AR, and thus we
call these receptors rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-ARs. Analysis of rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR tissue expression patterns reveals that the RBC
specifically expresses
3b-AR, suggesting that
-NHE
activity in the trout RBC is modulated by signaling through a
3-AR subtype and not a
1-AR subtype as
previously hypothesized. This is the first report of
3-ARs in
fish, and the proposed control of the trout RBC
-NHE system by
3b-AR signaling represents a novel role for
3-ARs in vertebrates.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Isolation of RNA. For RT-PCR and RNase protection assays (RPAs), trout were perfused through the heart with 1 liter of saline (0.9% NaCl) to flush blood from the tissues before tissue isolation. Total cellular RNA was isolated from fresh tissues of the rainbow trout using Trizol reagent (GIBCO BRL). RNA concentrations and quality were verified using spectrophotometry and agarose gel electrophoresis. Aliquots of RNA to be used in RT-PCR, RPAs, or quantitative (Q)-PCR were treated with DNase1 DNA free kit (Ambion Austin, TX) before use.
Amplification of rainbow trout
3a-
and
3b-AR cDNA. An initial set of
trout
3a- and
3b-AR clones spanning the
first to sixth transmembrane domains (
750 bps) were amplified using a
nested RT-PCR strategy. Oligo-p(dT)15 primed cDNA was synthesized
using the First Strand cDNA Synthesis Kit for RT-PCR (Roche Molecular
Biologicals). A preliminary round of PCR amplification was performed using the
degenerate primers AdrUni 5' and AdrUni 3'
(Table 1), followed by a second
round of amplification using the nested degenerate primers BetaUni 5'
and BetaUni 3' (Table 1).
All putative
-AR clones were sequenced using the Big Dye Terminator
Cycle Sequencing kit version 3.0 (PE Applied Biosystems) and standard M13
forward (-20) and reverse sequencing primers. The sequence of these clones was
then used to design gene-specific primers for 5'- and 3'-RACE of
both trout
3a- and
3 b-ARs.
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RACE PCR. The 5'- and 3'-RACE System for Rapid
Amplification of cDNA Ends, version 2 (GIBCO BRL), was used to amplify the
5'- and 3'-ends of the trout
3a- and
3b-AR cDNAs. In the 5'-RACE protocol, trout
3a- and
3b-AR gene-specific primers
3a-GSP1 and
3b-GSP1
(Table 1) were used to prime
cDNA synthesis of trout
3a- or
3b-ARs
separately. These cDNAs were then used as template in an initial round of PCR
amplification using a second set of primers specific for either trout
3a-AR (
3a-GSP2) or
3b-AR
(
3b-GSP2) (Table
1) and the 5'-amplification primer provided with the kit. A
5-µl aliquot of the initial PCR amplification was then used as a template
for a second round of PCR using nested primers specific for either trout
3a-AR (
3a-GSP3) or
3b-AR
(
3b-GSP3) (Table
1) and the abridged universal amplification primer (AUAP) provided
with the kit.
Synthesis of cDNA for 3'-RACE was primed with the
3'-amplification primer provided in the kit. A first round of PCR
amplification was performed using trout
3a- or
3b-AR gene-specific primers,
3a-GSP4 or
3b-GSP4, respectively
(Table 1), and AUAP. A second
round of semi-nested PCR amplification using trout
3a- or
3b-AR gene-specific primers
3a-GSP5 or
3b-GSP5 (Table
1) and AUAP was then carried out.
The complete coding region of the trout
3b-AR was PCR
cloned using nondegenerate primers, rainbow trout
3b complete
coding sequence (CDS), designed from the sequence of the
3b-AR 5'- and 3'-RACE clones.
All PCR amplifications described above used the following regimen of denaturing, annealing, and extension: 1 x 2 min at 94°C; 30 x 30 s at 94°C, 30 s at 45-60°C, 1 min at 72°C; and 1 x 10 min at 72°C. Annealing temperatures varied from 45 to 60°C depending on the primer sets being used (Table 1).
Sequence analyses. The rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR amino acid sequences (derived by conceptual translation
of nucleotide sequences) were aligned with GenBank sequences of various
-AR subtypes from selected organisms
(Table 2) using default
settings in CLUSTAL W version 1.8
(42). Maximum likelihood
phylogenetic analysis was performed using PUZZLE version 4.0.2
(39). The following program
settings were used: quartet puzzling tree search, compute exact quartet
likelihood, 1,000 puzzling steps, use the amphioxus dopamine/
-AR
sequence as outgroup, branch lengths are not clocklike, JTT model of
substitution, amino acid frequencies were estimated from the data set, and the
model of rate heterogeneity was 1 invariable + 8 gamma rates. The trout
3a- and
3b-AR sequences were analyzed for
the presence of gene conversion events using GENECONV version 1.70
(35). Because GENECONV
analyses work best with more than two sequences, this analysis was performed
on a data set composed of the trout
3a-, trout
3b-, and puffer fish
3-AR sequences
(8). The analysis was performed
using a g scale of two to allow for some mismatches in the converted regions
(35).
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RPA. The expression patterns of the rainbow trout
3a-and
3b-AR genes were determined using an
RPA, RPAIII (Ambion). Eight tissues were assessed: gill, heart, kidney, liver,
red muscle, white muscle, blood, and spleen. The template used to synthesize
the probes used in RPA experiments was obtained by PCR amplification of
plasmid clones of the trout
3a- or
3b-ARs.
These probes included the third intracellular loop region and corresponded to
nucleotides 804 to 958 for rainbow trout
3a-AR and 747 to 952
for rainbow trout
3b-AR
(Fig. 2). The primers used to
amplify probe template incorporated the promoter sequences for T7 and SP6 RNA
polymerases (Table 1) so that
antisense or sense RNA probes could be transcribed. Radiolabeled antisense RNA
probes were transcribed using MAXIscript (Ambion) with T7 RNA polymerase and
32P-UTP (Amersham Pharmacia). Full-length probes were isolated from
denaturing 4% polyacrylamide, 8 M urea gels. Approximately 4.2 x
104 cpm of probe was hybridized to 20 µg of total RNA for
16 h at 42°C. Nonhybridized transcripts were digested with
0.4
units of RNase A and 15 units of RNase T1 at 37°C for 90 min. Protected
fragments were resolved on denaturing 6% polyacrylamide, 8 M urea gels that
were dried and subjected to autoradiography.
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Quantification of
-AR mRNA levels. cDNA was
synthesized from 1 to 2 µg total RNA using random hexamer primers and
Superscript reverse transcriptase (GIBCO BRL).
-AR mRNA levels were
assessed by QPCR on duplicate samples of cDNA (1 µl) using a Hot StarTaq
Master Mix kit (Qiagen) and a Stratagene MX-4,000 multiplex QPCR system. CYBR
Green (Molecular Probes) and ROX (Stratagene) were used as DNA and reference
dyes, respectively. The PCR conditions (final reaction volume = 20 µl) were
as follows: cDNA template = 1.0 µl; forward and reverse primer = 150
pmol/l; Mg2+ concentration = 2.0 mmol/l; CYBR green =
1:50,000 final dilution; ROX = 1:30,000 final dilution; dNTPs = 200 µmol/l.
The annealing and extension temperatures were 58 and 72°C, respectively.
Gene-specific primers for rainbow trout
2-AR (QPCR
2-AR), rainbow trout
3b-AR (QPCR
3b-AR), and trout
-actin (QPCR
act) were designed
using Primer3 software
(http://www.genome.wi.mit.edu/cgi-bin/primer/primer3_www.cgi)
(Table 1). The specificity of
the primers was verified by cloning and sequencing of the amplified products.
To ensure that CYBR green was not being incorporated into primer dimers or
nonspecific amplicons during the QPCR runs, PCR products were analyzed by
agarose gel electrophoresis in initial experiments; single bands of the
expected size were obtained in all instances. Furthermore, the construction of
CYBR green dissociation curves after completion of 40 PCR cycles revealed the
presence of single amplicons for each primer pair. Relative expression of mRNA
levels was determined (using actin as an endogenous standard) by a
modification of the delta-delta Ct method
(30). Amplification
efficiencies were determined from standard curves generated by serial dilution
of plasmid DNA.
Kinetic analysis of receptor binding. Kinetic analysis of the
rainbow trout
3b-AR was carried out in intact trout RBCs
using the hydrophilic
-AR ligand
[(-)-4-(3-t-butylamino-2-hydroxypropoxy)-[5,7-3H]
benzimidazol-2-one][3H]CGP-12177 ([3H]CGP; Amersham,
specific activity 46.0 Ci/mmol). Previous studies have characterized CGP-12177
as an antagonist of mammalian
1- and
2-ARs
and as an agonist of mammalian
3-ARs
(34). Whole blood was diluted
10-fold in Hanks' buffered saline (in mM: 136.7 NaCl, 5.4 KCl, 0.8
MgSO4, 0.33 NaH2PO4, 0.44
KH2PO4, 5.0 HEPES, 5.0 HEPES-Na, 1.0 NaHCO3,
and 0.06 L-ascorbic acid, pH 7.6). Fifty microliters of cells were
incubated for 45 min at room temperature in a final volume of 150 µl in the
presence of a saturating concentration of [3H]CGP (
5 nM) alone
or with increasing concentrations of selective and nonselective agonists and
antagonists. With the exception of CL-316,243 (a gift from Dr. Jean
Himms-Hagen, Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology and Immunology, Faculty
of Medicine, University of Ottawa), all agonists and antagonists used were
purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO). Incubations were carried out in dim
light and aluminum foil was used to cover the ligand-containing
microcentrifuge tubes to prevent photodegradation. Assays were terminated
using four washes of ice-cold 0.9% NaCl and a cell membrane harvester (Brandel
24R). Glass fiber filters (#32, Schleicher and Schuell) were placed in
scintillation vials containing 4 ml scintillation cocktail (Safety-Solve; RPI,
Mount Prospect, IL). Radioactivity was determined using a Packard 2500TR
liquid scintillation counter after 24 h of incubation in the dark.
Physiological assessment of RBC
-NHE activity.
Trout were anesthetized in a solution of ethyl-P-amino-benzoate
(benzocaine; Sigma; final concentration 2.4 x 10-4
mol/l) and placed onto an operating table, where the gills were continuously
irrigated with aerated anesthetic solution. An in-dwelling polyethylene
cannula (Clay-Adams PE-50 polyethylene tubing; internal diameter 0.580 mm,
outer diameter 0.965 mm) was implanted into the dorsal aorta
(36) to permit blood sampling.
Fish were revived on the operating table by irrigation of the gills with
aerated water, then transferred to individual opaque acrylic experimental
chambers (volume = 3 liters) supplied with aerated, flowing water. Cannulas
were flushed daily with freshwater teleost saline
(44) containing 50 U/ml
ammonium heparin (Sigma).
Blood was withdrawn from the dorsal aortic cannula of fish and pooled to
obtain a sufficient volume of blood for a single experiment. In practice,
6.0-8.0 ml was obtained from two fish and this was usually sufficient to yield
enough blood for an entire experimental series. Blood sampling was halted
immediately at the first sign of agitation or struggling. Because of the
possibility that the blood contained higher than normal levels of circulating
catecholamines, the pooled sample was gassed with O2 for
2 min
to increase the rate of catecholamine degradation. The blood was then stored
on ice in 25-ml round-bottom tonometer flasks (final heparin concentration =
50 U/ml) for 4-6 h before experimentation. A previous report showed that
catecholamines decay with a half-life of 24 min when stored at 15°C under
similar conditions (41), and
thus it is likely that the catecholamine levels were low in the blood at the
time of experimentation.
The extent of activation of RBC
-AR-mediated
Na+/H+ exchange was assessed by real-time monitoring of
whole blood pH before and after addition of AR agonists and/or antagonists
(29). Blood (1.0 ml) was
transferred to a glass tonometry flask (Eschweiler; 5 ml vol) immersed in a
13°C water bath. Blood was then equilibrated by shaking for 20 min with a
hypoxic (PCO2 = 0.25 kPa; PO2 =
1.5 kPa, remainder N2) gas mixture. After 20 min, the blood was
pumped (peristaltic pump; 0.4 ml/min) through a temperature-controlled chamber
(13°C) housing a combination pH electrode (Metrohm) and then returned to
the tonometry flask. To prevent blood from clotting in the tubing and
electrode chambers, the loop was rinsed before each experiment for 10-15 min
with heparinized (540 U/ml) saline. On achieving a stable baseline pH (usually
within 5 min), the shaking was stopped momentarily (<10 s) to allow
injection (20 µl) of adrenergic agonists or saline (controls) into the
equilibrated blood; whole blood pH was then monitored for an additional 15
min. The maximal fall in pH (usually achieved within 5 min of agonist
addition) was used as an index of Na+/H+ exchange
activity (29). Analog pH data
output from a Radiometer PHM 73 blood gas analyzer was converted to digital
data and stored by interfacing with a data-acquisition system (Biopac Systems)
using Acknowledge data-acquisition software (sampling rate set at 30 Hz) and a
Pentium personal computer. In experiments to show antagonist inhibition of the
isoproterenol-stimulated decreased in blood pH, various adrenergic antagonists
(20 µl) were added to the blood at the beginning of the 20-min
equilibration period before addition of isoproterenol. Detection of
statistically significant differences between the changes in blood pH elicited
by isoproterenol alone vs. isoproterenol + antagonists was tested using a
one-way ANOVA (Sigma Stat version 2.0, SPSS). The agonists isoproterenol
(nonselective
-AR), clenbuterol (selective mammalian
2-AR), dobutamine (selective mammalian
1-AR), and BRL (selective mammalian
3-AR)
were used at final concentrations of 10-7 mol/l. The
antagonists atenolol (selective mammalian
1-AR), ICI
(selective mammalian
2-AR), and CGP (a mixed mammalian
1-/
2-AR) were used at a final concentration
of 10-5 mol/l.
| RESULTS |
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-AR amino acid
sequences including the rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-ARs produced a tree with three major groups corresponding
to the three pharmacologically defined
-AR subtypes and placed the trout
and puffer fish
3-ARs at the base of the mammalian/avian
3-AR group with strong statistical support (97%)
(Fig. 1). Phylogenetic analysis
also indicated that vertebrate
1- and
3-AR
subtypes are more closely related to one another than either is to the
2-AR subtype, although the support value for this
relationship is relatively low (67%).
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The rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR genes
encode proteins of 429 and 477 amino acids, respectively. Comparison of the
rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR sequences
reveals a high degree of sequence conservation at both the amino acid and
nucleotide levels and the presence of an additional 48 amino acids in the
cytoplasmic tail of the rainbow trout
3b-AR relative to
rainbow trout
3a-AR (Fig.
2). In addition, a gene conversion event at the 5'-end of
the rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR genes was
detected using GENECONV (35).
This conversion event is situated between bases 1 and 245 and is strongly
supported (P = 0.01). In this region of 245 bases, there are only
four nucleotide substitutions between
3a-AR and
3b-AR (1.6% substitution), whereas in the remaining 1039
bases there are 108 nucleotide substitutions between the two genes (10.4%
substitution).
In a multiple alignment of vertebrate
-AR amino acid sequences, the
trout
3-ARs showed the highest degree of sequence identity
with one another (84%) (results not shown). The rainbow trout
3a-AR amino acid sequence has an average identity of 54.6%,
51.2%, and 52.8% to other vertebrate
1-,
2-,
and
3-ARs, respectively, whereas rainbow trout
3b-AR shows an average amino acid identity of 54.2%, 52.2%,
and 52.0% to other vertebrate
1-,
2-, and
3-ARs, respectively. The highest levels of sequence
conservation occurred within the seven transmembrane domains, whereas the
amino terminal extracellular tail, third intracellular loop, and carboxy
terminal cytoplasmic tail regions were the most variable (results not
shown).
Tissue-specific expression patterns of the rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-ARs were determined using RPA.
Rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR gene-specific
probes for RPA were designed to span the third intracellular loop, a region of
relatively high sequence variability between the rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-ARs
(Fig. 2). Expression of rainbow
trout
3a- and
3b-ARs was examined in eight
tissues. RPA experiments showed high levels of
3a-AR mRNA in
gill and heart and low levels in red muscle. There was no detectable
3a-AR expression in kidney, liver, white muscle, blood, or
spleen after 8 h of autoradiography (Fig.
3). Rainbow trout
3b-AR mRNA was highly expressed
only in blood (Fig. 3). The
specific expression by the blood of high levels of
3b-AR
mRNA, suggested by RPA analysis, was further verified by QPCR experiments
measuring
3b-AR mRNA levels relative to
-actin in the
eight tissues studied (Fig. 4).
To validate this QPCR approach, the tissue distribution of trout
2-AR mRNA was also examined
(Fig. 4). Results of the
2-AR QPCR experiment were consistent with those of a previous
study demonstrating a broad tissue distribution of
2-AR mRNA
in trout tissues (24).
Identity of the amplified fragments was verified by sequencing in each set of
QPCR experiments. Northern blot analysis of trout blood total RNA using a
3b-AR-specific probe demonstrated the presence of a 3.6-kb
band in blood (results not shown). The
3b-AR-specific probe
used in the Northern blot experiment corresponded to the amplicon in the QPCR
experiments.
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Pharmacological characteristics of the rainbow trout
3b-AR
were determined by competitive binding assays performed on intact trout RBCs
using the
-AR ligand [3H]CGP. Preliminary experiments to
determine association kinetics found a disassociation constant of 1.07 nM for
[3H]CGP binding. Among the nonselective
-AR agonists,
isoproterenol inhibited [3H]CGP binding the most effectively with
an inhibition constant (Ki) of 7.14 ± 0.78
µM(n = 5) followed by Epi and NE
(Fig. 5). Neither Epi nor NE
produced greater than 50% inhibition of [3H]CGP binding at the
concentrations used; therefore, no Ki values could be
estimated. Displacement of [3H]CGP binding by
-AR
subtype-selective agonists indicated that only the
2-AR-specific agonist clenbuterol produced significant
displacement of [3H]CGP binding with a Ki of
809 ± 168 nM (n = 5) (Fig.
5). None of the remaining
-AR-selective agonists,
dobutamine, procaterol, BRL-37344, or CL-316,243, displaced
[3H]CGP. Among the
1/
2-selective
antagonists, the
2-AR-selective ICI-118,552 inhibited
[3H]CGP binding most effectively, with a Ki of
478 ± 118 nM (n = 4) followed by BAAM (
2 >
1; 1.79 ± 0.32 µM, n = 6) and atenolol
(
1-selective; Ki = 478 ± 118
µM, n = 4; Fig. 6).
Both
-AR-nonselective antagonists propanolol and nadalol inhibited
[3H]CGP binding to trout RBCs with Ki values of
1.40 ± 0.33 (n = 6) and 55.3 ± 28.7 nM (n =
3), respectively (Fig. 6).
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The pharmacological characteristics of the trout
3b-AR
were further investigated by examining the ability of various mammalian
-AR agonists and antagonists to activate/inhibit the rainbow trout RBC
-AR/
-NHE response in vitro. Activation of the RBC
-NHE was
measured as a decrease in the extracellular pH of the blood. Addition of the
nonselective
-AR agonist isoproterenol to the blood produced the largest
change in pH, followed by the
3-AR selective BRL
(Fig. 7). Dobutamine and
clenbuterol, which are
1-AR- and
2-AR-selective agonists, respectively, did not significantly
decrease blood pH (Fig. 7).
Antagonist inhibition of the isoproterenol-stimulated decrease in blood pH was
highest using the
2-AR-selective ICI (63.5% inhibition). Both
the
1-AR-selective antagonist atenolol and the mixed
1-/
2-AR antagonist CGP failed to
significantly inhibit the isoproterenol-stimulated decrease in blood pH
(Fig. 7). Interestingly, the
isoproterenol response of trout RBCs was inhibited most effectively by
clenbuterol (77.9% inhibition) (Fig.
7), a selective agonist of mammalian
2-ARs. The
level of inhibition produced by clenbuterol was higher than that produced
using atenolol and ICI together (70.6%;
Fig. 7).
|
| DISCUSSION |
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-AR amino acid
sequences produced a tree with three major groups corresponding to each of the
three pharmacologically defined
-AR subtypes and placed the trout
3a-,
3b-, and puffer fish
3-ARs in the mammalian/avian
3-AR group
(Fig. 1). The location of the
trout and puffer fish
3-ARs within this group (with strong
statistical support) indicates that these fish receptors are homologous to
mammalian
3-AR (Fig.
1). This is the first study to demonstrate the presence of a
3-AR in fish. Although the distribution of the
3-AR in mammalian tissues has recently expanded beyond
adipose tissue, the major role of the
3-AR subtype in most
mammals remains the mediation of the adipose tissue thermogenic response
(1,
12,
17,
21,
23). The presence of
3-ARs in trout and puffer fish, which are not expected to
possess a thermogenic response, is of interest as it implies a novel role for
this receptor subtype in fish.
Comparison of rainbow trout
3a- to
3b-AR
sequences indicates that overall these genes are highly similar at both the
amino acid and nucleotide levels (Fig.
2). The apparent lack of sequence divergence between the
extracellular tails of the two trout
3-AR sequences is
explained by the presence of a gene conversion event extending from position 1
to 245 between these two genes (Fig.
2). Gene conversion occurs between regions of DNA with similar,
but not identical, sequences and is common among members of a gene family
(4). Previous studies of
mammalian
-ARs suggest that the extracellular tail may not play a
significant role in receptor function
(7,
37,
43). The presence of a gene
conversion event between two
-ARs in this region is therefore not likely
to adversely affect receptor function. The possibility that the close
phylogenetic relationship of the trout
3a- and
3b-AR genes may be due to this gene conversion event detected
between the two sequences can be ruled out because exclusion of the converted
region from the phylogenetic analysis did not alter tree topology (result not
shown). This result suggests that the trout
3a- and
3b-AR are closely related because they arose from the genome
duplication event that occurred near the base of the salmonid lineage
(10,
26,
45).
Tissue-specific expression patterns of the rainbow trout
3-AR genes were determined using the highly sensitive RPA and
gene-specific probes that hybridized to a variable region that included the
third intracellular loop. Rainbow trout
3a-AR mRNA was
present at high levels in the gill and heart and at lower levels in red muscle
(Fig. 3). The presence of
rainbow trout
3a-AR mRNA in gill, heart, and red muscle is
consistent with previous binding studies on these tissues from trout and other
fish that demonstrated the presence of a
-AR
(11,
15,
18,
40). Rainbow trout
3b-AR is expressed predominantly and at high levels in the
RBC (Fig. 3 and
4). This result is in contrast
with previous physiology/pharmacology studies that suggested a
1-AR subtype-controlled
-NHE activity in the trout RBC
(41). Low levels of
3b-AR mRNA were also detected in other tissues
(Fig. 4).
These molecular data clearly demonstrate that the trout RBC contains a
3b-AR rather than a
1-AR subtype as
previously suggested (41). The
incongruence between the molecular and physiological data could be explained
by the presence of two
-AR subtypes in trout blood; however, several
lines of evidence argue against multiple
-ARs in trout blood. At the
pharmacological level, CGP binding to the trout RBC
-AR best fit a
one-site model, whereas at the molecular level the absence of rainbow trout
2- and
3a-AR expression in trout blood was
clearly demonstrated (Figs. 3
and 4; and Ref.
24). In addition, no potential
cross-hybridization products are apparent in either Northern blot (result not
shown) or RPA analyses of trout RBC RNA using rainbow trout
2-,
3a-, or
3b-AR-specific
probes (Fig. 3 and Ref.
24). Finally, numerous cloning
experiments using different primer sets designed to be either universal to all
-AR subtypes or specific to
1-AR subtypes yielded only
3b-AR sequences from trout blood. A second possible
explanation for the incongruence between the molecular and physiological data
may be that the previous pharmacological classification of the trout RBC
-AR as a
1-subtype was based on a rank order of potency
of NE > Epi for this trout receptor. Unfortunately, this potency order is
characteristic of both mammalian
1-and
3-AR
subtypes (38). Thus the
results of these previous studies could actually support the presence of
either a
1- or a
3-AR subtype in the trout
RBC. This possibility led to a more in-depth pharmacological characterization
of the rainbow trout RBC
3b-AR.
Competitive displacement of [3H]CGP from RBC
3b-ARs by the nonselective endogenous
-AR agonists Epi
and NE confirms previous studies and indicates that the trout RBC
3b-AR has a higher affinity for NE than Epi
(Fig. 5). However, of the
subtype-selective
-AR agonists, only clenbuterol (
2
selective) produced significant displacement of [3H]CGP from the
3b-AR (Fig.
5). The use of
-AR-subtype-selective antagonists also
indicated
2-AR binding properties, whereas the high affinity
of the rainbow trout
3b-AR for the nonselective
-AR
antagonists propranolol and nadalol (Fig.
6) is not consistent with mammalian
3-ARs that
show low affinities for these same compounds
(38). Taken together, these
results argue in favor of
2-AR-like binding characteristics
for the trout RBC
3b-AR. However, experiments examining the
in vitro ability of various
-AR agonists and antagonists to elicit
changes in blood pH through stimulation or inhibition of
-AR signaling
in the trout RBC do not concur with a
2-AR-like pharmacology
for this trout
-AR. Among
-AR agonists, isoproterenol (
-AR
nonselective) elicited the largest drop in blood pH followed by BRL
(
3 selective), with dobutamine (
1 selective)
and clenbuterol (
2 selective) failing to elicit significant
decreases in blood pH (Fig. 7).
Inhibition of the RBC isoproterenol response by various compounds surprisingly
demonstrated that clenbuterol, a
2-AR agonist, produced the
highest level of inhibition (77.8%). Thus clenbuterol acts as an antagonist at
the trout RBC
3b-AR. Among
-AR antagonists, ICI
(
2 selective) produced the largest inhibition of the
isoproterenol response, whereas atenolol (
1 selective) and
CGP (
1/
2 mixed) failed to significantly
inhibit the isoproterenol response (Fig.
7). The results of the competitive displacement and
activation/inhibition studies demonstrate that the trout
3b-AR possesses novel pharmacological properties relative to
those of the three well-defined mammalian
-AR subtypes. Again, these
results do not support the previous
1-AR subtype
classification of this receptor that was based on fewer AR ligands.
Furthermore, these results are in agreement with a previous finding that
-ARs from nonmammalian vertebrates such as amphibians and fish do not
fit into the pharmacological categories established for mammalian
-ARs
(14). This finding suggests
that caution is necessary when defining fish AR subtypes using ligands
developed for mammalian receptor systems.
This study presents molecular data describing two new members of the trout
-AR gene family (rainbow trout
3a- and
3b-AR). Our classification of these trout
-ARs as
homologs to the mammalian
3-AR is based on a phylogenetic
analysis that received high statistical support. However, the rainbow trout
3b-AR possesses unique pharmacological properties that
distinguish this trout receptor from the three pharmacologically defined
mammalian
-AR subtypes, including the
3-AR. Despite
this fact, the classification of this trout receptor as a
3b-AR reflects its evolutionary relationship to other
vertebrate
-ARs. The high level of
3b-AR expression in
trout blood is strong evidence that this receptor is responsible for
controlling RBC
-NHE activity. Control of trout RBC
-NHE activity
represents a novel role for a
3-AR subtype in fish and
demonstrates that the unique characteristics of the components in the trout
RBC
-AR/
-NHE system extend beyond the adrenergically activated
Na+/H+ exchanger.
| DISCLOSURES |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
| REFERENCES |
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