Topology of the signal transduction of the G protein-coupled somatostatin receptor sst2 in human glioma cells.
| Title | Topology of the signal transduction of the G protein-coupled somatostatin receptor sst2 in human glioma cells. | 
| Publication Type | Journal Article | 
| Year of Publication | 2001 | 
| Authors | Mentlein, R, Held-Feindt J, Krisch B | 
| Journal | Cell and tissue research | 
| Volume | 303 | 
| Issue | 1 | 
| Pagination | 27-34 | 
| Date Published | 2001 Jan | 
| ISSN | 0302-766X | 
| Keywords | Animals, Antibodies, Caveolin 1, Caveolins, Endocytosis, Glioblastoma, GTP-Binding Protein alpha Subunits, Gi-Go, Hormones, Humans, Microscopy, Immunoelectron, Octreotide, Organelles, Rabbits, Receptors, Somatostatin, Signal Transduction, Somatostatin, Tumor Cells, Cultured | 
| Abstract | By a dual approach, using electron microscopy and biochemical techniques, we investigated the topology of the somatostatin receptor sst2 with its inhibitory G protein Gialpha after ligand-induced stimulation and internalization in human glioma cells. On intact cells, the sst2 was labeled at 8 degrees C by an antibody directed to its extracellular sequence followed by a 15-nm gold-labeled secondary antibody. In the presence of the ligand, internalization was induced by exposure to 37 degrees C for 5-10 min. Then, cells were either fixed for immunoelectron-microscopic analysis or homogenized for density gradient separation. After post-embedding staining of the sst2-labeled sections with anti-Gialpha1- 3 or anti-caveolin, a co-localization of sst2, Gialpha and caveolin was detected in endosomal vesicles after 5 min of internalization, but not after 10 min. Furthermore, the gold-labeled organelles containing the internalised receptor were separated from the non-labeled ones on sucrose gradients (density shift separation) and analyzed by Western blotting. Also here, in fractions with higher densities, sst2 could be costained with Gialpha and caveolin after 5 min. From these congruent results from both methods, it can be concluded that, in human glioma cells, the receptor sst2 (1) is internalised in caveolin-positive vesicles and (2) is neighboured to its Gialpha proteins at the plasma membrane and early endosomes.  |  
| Alternate Journal | Cell Tissue Res. | 
