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Vol. 58, Issue 6, 1424-1433, December 2000
Center for Basic Research in Digestive Diseases, Mayo Clinic and
Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota
Intermolecular interaction represents an important theme in regulation
of intracellular trafficking of organelles that can be interrupted by
competitive overexpression of a relevant molecular domain. We attempted
to identify the functional importance of intracellular domains of the
cholecystokinin (CCK) receptor by their over-expression in
receptor-bearing Chinese hamster ovary (CHO-CCKR) cell lines. Although
clathrin-dependent endocytosis and recycling of this receptor are
well-established (J Cell Biol 128:1029-1042, 1995), any influence of distinct receptor domains is not understood. In this work, constructs representing each
of the intracellular domains of the CCK receptor were coexpressed with
wild-type receptor, and stable clonal cell lines were selected. Each
was characterized for ligand binding and agonist-stimulated biological
activity (inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate generation), desensitization,
resensitization, receptor internalization, and recycling. Each cell
line expressed normal CCK radioligand binding, signaling,
internalization, and desensitization. Three independent cell lines that
coexpressed the 25-residue second intracellular loop domain exhibited
deficient resensitization. In morphological assessment of receptor
trafficking, this construct was also shown to interfere with receptor
recycling to the plasma membrane. As a control, recycling of an
unrelated G protein-coupled receptor was demonstrated to occur normally
in this cell line. These observations suggest that rather than
representing passive cargo within an endosome, a receptor can influence
its own trafficking within the cell.