IL-6
Author(s) -
Franziska Noe,
Tim Frey,
Julia Fiedler,
Christiane Geithe,
Bettiowak,
Dietmar Krautwurst
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of biological methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2326-9901
DOI - 10.14440/jbm.2017.206
Subject(s) - receptor , hek 293 cells , g protein coupled receptor , agonist , chemistry , cell , microbiology and biotechnology , rhodopsin , flow cytometry , recombinant dna , biology , biochemistry , gene , retinal
The assignment of cognate odorant/agonist pairs is a prerequisite for an understanding of odorant coding at the receptor level. However, the identification of new ligands for odorant receptors (ORs) in cell-based assays has been challenging, due to their individual and rather sub-optimal plasma membrane expression, as compared with other G protein-coupled receptors. Accessory proteins, such as the chaperone RTP1S, or Ric8b, have improved the surface expression of at least a portion of ORs. Typically, recombinant ORs carry N-terminal tags, which proved helpful for their functional membrane expression. The most common tag is the ‘Rho-tag’, representing an N-terminal part of rhodopsin, but also ‘Lucy-’ or ‘Flag-tag’ extensions have been described. Here, we used a bi-functional N-terminal tag, called ‘interleukin 6 (IL-6)-HaloTag ® ’, with IL-6 facilitating functional cell surface expression of recombinant ORs, and the HaloTag ® protein, serving as a highly specific acceptor for cell-impermeant or cell-permeant, fluorophore-coupled ligands, which enable the quantification of odorant receptor expression by live-cell flow cytometry. Our experiments revealed on average an about four-fold increased surface expression, a four-fold higher signaling amplitude, and a significantly higher potency of odorant-induced cAMP signaling of six different human IL-6-HaloTag ® -ORs across five different receptor families in NxG 108CC15 cells, as compared to their Rho-tag–HaloTag ® constructs. We observed similar results in HEK-293 cells. Moreover, screening an IL-6–HaloTag ® -odorant receptor library with allyl phenyl acetate, revealed both known receptors as best responders for this compound. In summary, the IL-6–HaloTag ® represents a promising tool for the de-orphaning of ORs.
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