A high-resolution analysis of arrestin2 interactions responsible for CCR5 endocytosis
Abstract
Clathrin-mediated endocytosis (CME) is crucial for regulating G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) via phosphorylation-dependent arrestin interactions. Despite detailed structural knowledge on the arrestin interactions with phosphorylated tails of GPCRs, the interplay between receptor phosphorylation and arrestin coupling to the CME machinery is not well understood, in particular due to the weakness and dynamics of the individual molecular interactions. Here we have characterized the interactions of arrestin2, which is activated by the phosphorylated C-terminus of the human chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5), with the main protein constituents of CME, namely clathrin and AP2 proteins by solution NMR spectroscopy, biochemical and cellular assays. The NMR analysis revealed that arrestin2 interacts weakly with clathrin through a single binding site, independent of arrestin2 activation. In contrast, the arrestin2-AP2 interaction is stronger, requires arrestin2 activation by the CCR5 phospho-tail, and depends quantitatively on its degree of phosphorylation. Thesein vitroresults are corroborated by cellular assays, which show that the chemokine-induced formation of a long-lived CCR5-arrestin2 internalization complex depends strongly on the interaction of arrestin2 with AP2, but not with clathrin. Taken together, these findings provide quantitative, atom-scale insights on the first steps of CCR5 endocytosis.
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