Abstract
Platelet activation plays an essential role in thrombosis. ADP-induced platelet aggregation is mediated by two distinct G protein-coupled ADP receptors, Gq-linked P2Y1, and Gi-linked P2TAC, which has not been cloned. The cDNA encoding a novel G protein-coupled receptor, termed HORK3, was isolated. The HORK3gene and P2Y1 gene were mapped to chromosome 3q21-q25. HORK3, when transfected in the rat glioma cell subline (C6–15), responded to 2-methylthio-ADP (2MeSADP) (EC50 = 0.08 nM) and ADP (EC50 = 42 nM) with inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP accumulation. 2MeSADP (EC50 = 1.3 nM) and ADP (EC50 = 18 nM) also induced intracellular calcium mobilization in P2Y1-expressing cells. These results show that HORK3 is a Gi/o-coupled receptor and that its natural ligand is ADP. AR-C69931 MX and 2MeSAMP, P2TAC antagonists, selectively inhibited 2MeSADP-induced adenylyl cyclase inhibition in HORK3-expressing cells. On the other hand, A3P5PS, a P2Y1 antagonist, blocked only 2MeSADP-induced calcium mobilization in P2Y1-expressing cells. HORK3 mRNA was detected in human platelets and the expression level of HORK3 was equivalent to that of P2Y1. These observations indicate that HORK3 has the characteristics of the proposed P2TAC receptor. We have also determined that [3H]2MeSADP binds to cloned HORK3 and P2Y1. Competition binding experiments revealed a similarity in the rank orders of potency of agonists and the selectivity of antagonists as obtained in the functional assay. These results support the view that P2Y1 functions as a high-affinity ADP receptor and P2TAC as a low-affinity ADP receptor in platelets.
Extracellular nucleotides, primary ATP, ADP, UTP, and UDP, are important signaling molecules that mediate diverse biological effects through P2 purinergic receptors (Kunapuli and Daniel, 1998; Ralevic and Burnstock, 1998). Based on differences in their molecular structures and signal transduction mechanisms, P2 receptors are subclassified as P2X and P2Y receptors. P2X ionotropic receptors are ATP ligand-gated cation channel receptors, and P2Y metabotropic seven transmembrane domain receptors are coupled to G proteins. To date, seven types of mammalian P2X receptors (P2X1-P2X7) and at least five types of P2Y receptors (P2Y1, P2Y2, P2Y4, P2Y6, and P2Y11) have been cloned and characterized. P2Y1 and P2Y11 are specifically activated by adenine nucleotides, whereas P2Y2, P2Y4, and P2Y6 respond to uridine nucleotides (King et al., 1998). All the cloned P2Y receptors induce intracellular calcium mobilization through the activation of phospholipase C, and P2Y11 also induces cAMP accumulation through the activation of adenylyl cyclase (Communi et al., 1999). Other P2 receptors, including an ADP receptor (P2TAC/P2YADP) negatively coupled to adenylyl cyclase in platelets and a receptor (P2D/P2YAP4A) for diadenosine polyphosphate in synaptosomes, have been proposed based on pharmacological data (Macfarlane et al., 1983; Pintor et al., 1993).
Platelet activation plays an essential role in thrombosis. ADP has been known to induce a platelet shape change and to activate fibrinogen receptors, leading to platelet aggregation (Kunapuli et al., 1998;Kunapuli and Daniel, 1998). Specific ADP receptors mediate these responses. Pharmacological studies using selective antagonists showed that ADP-induced platelet aggregation requires intracellular signaling from two distinct G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs): a Gi-coupled ADP receptor (P2TAC/P2YADP) causing the inhibition of adenylyl cyclase and a Gq-coupled ADP receptor (P2TPLC) causing intracellular calcium mobilization (Daniel et al., 1998; Kunapuli, 1998). It has been shown that platelet P2TPLC is the previously cloned P2Y1 receptor, but molecular identification of P2TAC/P2YADP has remained elusive (Hechler et al., 1998; Jin et al., 1998a; Jin and Kunapuli, 1998; Jantzen et al., 1999).
We have isolated numerous novel sequences that encode structural characteristics common to GPCRs using a computational survey of public dbEST and genomic databases. One of the identified clones, termed HORK3, is predicted to be a novel GPCR encoding a 342-amino-acid protein that is 43% identical with the human UDP-sugar receptor KIAA0001 (Chambers et al., 2000). We report here evidence that HORK3 is a Gi/o-coupled receptor for ADP and that its pharmacological characteristics suggest it is the proposed P2TAC.
Experimental Procedures
Cloning of HORK3 and Human P2Y1.
Using the TBLASTN algorithm, dbEST and genomic databases (National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Institutes of Health) were queried with the amino acid sequence of CysLT2 (GenBank Accession no.AB038269). One genomic draft-sequence (GenBank Accession no. AC024886) derived from chromosome 3 was predicted to encode a novel GPCR. Primers were generated from the novel GPCR sequence, and the cDNA was amplified by 5′- and 3′-rapid amplification of the cDNA ends (RACE) system from Human Brain Marathon-ready cDNA (CLONTECH, Palo Alto, CA) as described previously (Kamohara et al., 2000). The amplified RACE products were sequenced directly to avoid the influence of PCR error, and a 1029-base-pair open reading frame (ORF) was found. The nucleotide sequence data reported in this article will appear in the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank nucleotide sequence databases with the accession number AB052684. The ORF was amplified from human brain cDNA using the following XbaI restriction site-containing primers: 5′-CCTCTAGAATGCAAGCCGTCGACAACCTCACCTC-3′ and 5′-CCTCTAGACTATTACATTGGAGTCTCTTCATTTG-3′. For cloning of the human P2Y1, PCR was performed on human placenta cDNA using the following SpeI restriction site-containing primers: 5′-AAAAACTAGTATGACCGAGGTGCTGTGGCC-3′ and 5′-AAAAACTAGTTCACAGGCTTGTATCTCCATTCT-3′.
Preparation of HORK3 or P2Y1-Expressing C6–15 Cells.
HORK3 cDNA or P2Y1 cDNA was ligated into an expression vector plasmid, pEF-BOS-neo (Mizushima and Nagata, 1990), using the XbaI sites. The constructs or pEF-BOS-neo alone were transfected into a rat glioma cell line, C6–15, which was a gift from Prof. Y. Takuwa (Kanazawa University School of Medicine, Kanazawa, Japan). The C6–15 cells expressing HORK3 or P2Y1 were established by selecting 0.6 mg/ml Geneticin-resistant clones.
Assay for Inhibition of Forskolin-Induced Intracellular Accumulation of cAMP.
HORK3-expressing cells were plated at a density of 1 ×104 cells/well in 96-well plates and incubated for 24 h. The cells were exposed to ligands with 1 μM forskolin dissolved in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium containing 1 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) (Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and 0.1% bovine serum albumin. After incubation for 30 min, the cells were harvested by 0.2% Triton X-100 in phosphate-buffered saline. Intracellular cAMP was measured using a cAMP homogenous time-resolved fluorescence kit (CIS bio international, Bagnols-sur-Ceze, France). The cell lysates were incubated with cAMP-XL665 and anti-cAMP cryptate for 3 h at 4°C. The fluorescence ratio (665/620 nm × 10,000) of the samples and standard cAMP were read on Discovery (Packard, Meriden, CT), and the cyclic AMP concentrations were calculated by the displacement curve obtained from standard cAMP.
Calcium Mobilization Experiments.
Calcium mobilization studies were conducted using Fluo 3, AM-loaded HORK3, or P2Y1-expressing cells and a microtiter plate-based assay using fluorometric imaging plate reader (Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). Transient changes in intracellular calcium concentrations caused by agonists and antagonists were monitored as described previously (Takasaki et al., 2000).
Radioligand Binding Assay.
HORK3, P2Y1-expressing C6–15 cells or C6–15 cells were harvested and homogenized in ice-cold 20 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA and a protease inhibitor cocktail set, Complete (Hoffman La Roche, Nutley, NJ), and centrifuged at 200g for 5 min. The supernatant was centrifuged at 100,000g for 20 min at 4°C. The resulting pellets were homogenized again in assay buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% BSA, 100 mM NaCl, and Complete). The membrane preparations (20 μg of protein) were incubated with concentrations (0.1 to 500 nM) of [3H]2MeSADP (111 GBq/mmol; Moravek Biochemicals Inc., Brea, CA) for 2 h at 25°C. After incubation, the reaction was stopped by the addition of washing buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.4, and 5 mM MgCl2), followed immediately by rapid filtration through Whatman GF/B glass fiber filters. The filters were rinsed three times, and the radioactivity retained on each filter was measured with a liquid scintillation counter. The 2MeSADP-specific binding was calculated by subtracting the nonspecific binding which was defined with 100 μM unlabeled 2MeSADP. Specific binding of [3H]2MeSADP for HORK 3 and P2Y1-expressing cell membrane accounted for 80 to 90% and 75 to 85% of the total binding, respectively. For the competition studies, 1 nM or 10 nM [3H]2MeSADP was added to aliquots of the HORK3 or P2Y1membrane preparation, which were then incubated with one of several concentrations of compounds. Binding data were analyzed using Prism (Graphpad Software Inc., San Diego, CA).
Quantitative Analysis of HORK3 and P2Y1 mRNA by Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR).
Poly(A)+ RNA from various human tissues were purchased from CLONTECH, and cDNAs were synthesized from these as described previously (Matsumoto et al., 2000). Human mononuclear cells, neutrophils, and eosinophils were isolated from the heparinized blood of informed healthy volunteers using the Ficoll-Paque (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) technique and CD16 microbeads (MACS reagents: Milteny Biotech, Gladbach, Germany). Platelet-rich plasma was also prepared from blood, which was collected in a 1/10 volume of 3.8% sodium citrate, by centrifugation at 230g for 15 min at room temperature. The mononuclear cells, neutrophils, eosinophils, and platelets were washed with phosphate-buffered saline. Total RNA preparation and cDNA syntheses were performed as described previously (Kamohara et al., 2000). We quantified HORK3 and P2Y1 mRNA by means of a Prism 7700 Sequence Detector (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) with primer sets (5′-GCAAGCCGTCGACAACC-3′ and 5′-TGATTTTGTAGTCTCTGGTGCACA-3′ for HORK3; 5′-CCTCCACTGCCGCCG-3′ and 5′-AACTGGAAGCCCGTCTTGGT-3′ for P2Y1) and fluorescence-labeled probes (5′-FAM)-CACCTCTGCGCCTGGTAACACCAG-(TAMRA)-3′ for HORK3 and 5′-(FAM)-CTCCTCGTCGTTCAAATGCGCCTT-(TAMRA)-3′ for P2Y1). RT-PCR was carried out in a 25-μl reaction mixture prepared with a TaqMan PCR Core Reagent Kit (PE Biosystems, Warrington, UK) containing an appropriately diluted cDNA solution, 0.2 μM concentrations of each primer, and 0.1 μM probe. To obtain a calibration curve, we amplified a known amount of human genomic DNA in the same manner as the samples. The number of copies of genomic DNA per micro liter was calculated using the equation described previously (Kamohara et al., 2000). Human β-actin mRNA was also measured as an internal control.
Materials.
2MeSADP, PPADS, and reactive blue 2 were purchased from Sigma/RBI (Natick, MA). Other nucleotides, nucleotide derivatives, and pertussis toxin were purchased from Sigma. AR-C69931 MX was synthesized in-house.
Results
Identification and Molecular Characterization of HORK3, a Novel GPCR.
The human HORK3 was identified using a combination of genomic database searching and a 5′- and 3′-RACE system. The search of genomic databases suggested a genomic draft-sequence (GenBank Accession no. AC024886), which contains a sequence that encodes a novel GPCR. The ORF encodes a unique putative GPCR protein of 342 amino acids, designated HORK3, which is closely related to the UDP-sugar receptor KIAA0001 with 43% identity and the platelet-activating factor receptor with 30% identity, whereas HORK3 shares a relative low identity (about 25%) to P2Y receptors (Fig. 1). From genomic sequence analysis using the Human Genome Reconstruction Project (HGREP;http://hgrep.ims.u-tokyo.ac.jp/cgi-bin/HTGtool/view.cgi?layer=top), the HORK3 gene was mapped between D3S1279 and D3S1280 on chromosome 3q21-q25. This region also includes KIAA0001,P2Y1 , and H963, which also shares 31% identity with HORK3.
Pharmacological Characterization of HORK3.
To identify possible ligands of HORK3, the changes in intracellular cAMP and calcium after the addition of various bioactive materials were examined using a subline of rat glioma cells (C6–15) transfected with HORK3 cDNA. C6–15 was reported not to express endogenous P2Y receptors at any significant level, as evaluated using the measurements of intracellular calcium mobilization response and cellular cAMP changes by nucleotides (Chang et al., 1995). Based on the HORK3 sequence homology, we predicted its ligands as UDP-sugars or bioactive lipids. UDP-sugars (UDP-glucose, UDP-galactose etc.), other nucleotide-sugars (CDP-glucose, ADP-glucose etc.) and bioactive lipids (leukotrienes, platelet-activating factor, etc.) showed no effect on HORK3-expressing C6–15 cells, and no clear difference was apparent when these were compared with vector-transfected C6–15 cells.
We also analyzed HORK3 activity using other bioactive materials, such as peptides and nucleotides. Among the nucleotides tested, 2MeSATP, 2MeSADP, ATP, ADP, and ADPβS induced significant inhibition of forskolin-stimulated intracellular cAMP accumulation in HORK3-expressing cells (Fig. 2A). However, other nucleotides, nucleosides and nucleotide derivatives, such as AMP, 2MeSAMP, adenosine, α,β-methylene ATP, 2′ and 3′-O-(4-benzoyl-benzoyl)-ATP, UTP, UDP, and adenosine polyphosphates (up to 10−5 M), had no effect on cAMP accumulation in HORK3-expressing cells (data not shown). The rank order of potency of the series of agonist was 2MeSADP = 2MeSATP > ADP > ADPβS > ATP with respective EC50 values of 0.078, 0.098, 42, 404, and 690 nM (Table 1). These nucleotides did not affect mock-transfected cells on cAMP accumulation, and did not significantly induce intracellular calcium mobilization in vector-transfected and HORK3-expressing C6–15 cells (data not shown). The activity of adenylyl cyclase inhibition of HORK3 by 2MeSADP was completely blocked by 50 ng/ml pertussis toxin (Fig. 2A). These results showed that HORK3 is a Gi/o-coupled receptor and that its most potent natural ligand is ADP.
Pharmacological Comparison with P2Y1.
We compared the pharmacological profile of HORK3 with that of another ADP receptor, human P2Y1, transfected in C6–15 cells. Same nucleotides also induced intracellular calcium mobilization in P2Y1-expressing cells with a rank order of potency: 2MeSADP = 2MeSATP > ADP > ADPβS > ATP (Fig. 2B and Table 1).
Next, the antagonistic activity of various compounds on HORK3 activity and P2Y1 activity were analyzed (Fig.3, A and B; Table 1). Reactive blue 2, a nonselective P2 antagonist, blocked both the adenylyl cyclase inhibition of HORK3 (IC50 value of 13 μM) and the intracellular calcium mobilization of P2Y1(IC50 value of 15 μM). Suramin, another nonselective P2 antagonist, was a weak antagonist for both HORK3 and P2Y1 at 100 μM. PPADS and A3P5PS, on the other hand, inhibited P2Y1 activity (IC50 values of 3.7 and 8.0 μM, respectively) but did not inhibit HORK3 activity, whereas 2MeSAMP inhibited only HORK3 activity (IC50 value of 5.0 μM). In addition, AR-C69931 MX, a potent selective P2TACantagonist, inhibited HORK3 activity with high potency (IC50 value of 2.4 nM) but had no effect on P2Y1-expressing cells (Fig. 3C and Table 1).
Binding of [3H]2MeSADP.
No specific binding of [3H]2MeSADP was observed in the membranes from nontransfected C6–15 cells. Saturation binding studies of [3H]2MeSADP were therefore performed using membranes of HORK3 and P2Y1-expressing C6–15 cells. Analysis of binding data revealed that [3H]2MeSADP bound to two sites on the membranes of HORK3-expressing cells with Kd values of 0.23 ± 0.05, and 33 ± 5.2 nM, with respectiveBmax values of 1.4 ± 0.17, and 14 ± 1.0 pmol/mg protein (the mean ± SD of three separate experiments; Fig.4, A and B). The addition of 100 μM guanosine 5′-O-(thiotriphosphate) (GTPγS) during binding assay reduced the high-affinity binding sites of [3H]2MeSADP to an undetectable level. On the other hand, [3H]2MeSADP bound to a single site on the membranes of P2Y1-expressing cells with aKd value of 49 ± 9.1 nM, with a respectiveBmax value of 15 ± 0.2 pmol/mg protein (Fig. 4, C and D). The addition of GTPγS caused a nearly 12-fold reduction in the affinity.
Next, competition-binding experiments were carried out on these membranes (Fig. 5, A and B). 2MeSADP, ADP, and ADPβS competed with the binding of [3H]2MeSADP to the membrane of HORK3 with IC50 values of 0.53 nM, 175 nM, and 2.5 μM, respectively (n = 3). [3H]2MeSADP binding to P2Y1 was also inhibited by 2MeSADP (IC50 = 7.7 nM; n = 3), ADP (IC50 = 33 nM; n = 3) and ADPβS (IC50 = 181 nM; n = 3). Only 2MeSAMP and AR-C69931 MX inhibited the [3H]2MeSADP binding to HORK3 with IC50 values of 4.2 μM and 10 nM, respectively, whereas only A3P5PS inhibited the binding to P2Y1with an IC50 value of 60 μM (n= 3).
Tissue Distribution of HORK3.
The expression of HORK3 and P2Y1 mRNA in human purified peripheral blood cells (peripheral blood mononuclear cells, neutrophils, eosinophils, and platelets) were examined using real-time quantitative PCR (TaqMan) analysis. As shown in Fig. 6A, high levels of HORK3 and P2Y1 mRNA were detected in the platelets, and the expression level of HORK3 mRNA was equivalent to that of P2Y1 (the mean of three individual mRNA samples). The expression of HORK3 mRNA in human tissues was also evaluated. HORK3 mRNA was detected mainly in the brain and was not expressed in other tissues (Fig. 6B).
Discussion
We reported here the identification of a novel GPCR, termed HORK3, which is a Gi/o-coupled ADP receptor. P2TAC/P2YADP, P2D/P2YAP4A, P3, and P4 have been proposed as additional members of the P2Y receptor family (Macfarlane et al., 1983; Forsyth et al., 1991; Pintor et al., 1993;Ralevic and Burnstock, 1998). P2D and P4 are distinct diadenosine polyphosphate receptors in the central nervous system, and both nucleosides and nucleotides activate P3. Neither diadenosine polyphosphate nor adenosine activated HORK3, indicating that HORK3 does not have the characteristics of P2D, P3, and P4. P2TAC has been demonstrated to be a Gi-coupled receptor for ADP in platelets. Our data suggested that the pharmacological characteristics of HORK3 revealed it to be the elusive P2TAC.
HORK3, KIAA0001, H963, andP2Y1 genes are mapped to 3q21-q25. The three closely related receptors, HORK3,KIAA0001, and H963, are localized in tandem within about 1 megabase pair, but the distance from these three receptors to P2Y1 is about 10 megabase pairs, suggesting that the three closely related receptors have been generated by tandem replication during a recent evolutionary event but that P2Y1 originated from gene duplication during an early evolutionary stage.
In platelets, previous studies comparing the agonist potency indicated that ADP is a more potent agonist in intracellular calcium mobilization via P2Y1 than in adenylyl cyclase inhibition via P2TAC. It has also been reported that 2MeSADP is a more potent agonist at P2TAC and P2Y1 than ADP (Hall and Hourani, 1993; Hourani and Hall, 1996). Moreover, 2MeSADP is at least 100 times more potent than ADP at P2TAC, but only four to ten times more potent than ADP at P2Y1 (Hourani and Hall, 1996; Daniel et al., 1998; Jin and Kunapuli, 1998). These features are similar to those shown by our data, in which ADP was about two times more potent in calcium mobilization of the P2Y1-expressing cells than in adenylyl cyclase inhibition of HORK3-expressing cells, and the potency of 2MeSADP for HORK3 and for P2Y1 was about 500 times and 13 times higher, respectively, than that of ADP. The rank orders of potency of agonists are consistent with those described for P2TAC and P2Y1 in platelets.
The characteristics of platelet ADP receptor subtypes have also been studied using selective antagonists. AR-C69931 MX is known to be a very potent selective P2TAC antagonist, with an IC50 value of 0.4 nM against ADP-induced platelet aggregation (Ingall et al., 1999). 2MeSAMP has also been reported to be a selective antagonist for P2TAC, in which 2MeSAMP blocks ADP-induced adenylyl cyclase inhibition (IC50 = 0.57 μM) in platelets (Jantzen et al., 1999). A3P5PS, a selective P2Y1 antagonist, has been reported to inhibit ADP and 2MeSADP-induced calcium mobilization (IC50 values of about 10 μM) in platelets (Boyer et al., 1996; Jin et al., 1998a). In our data, AR-C69931 MX and 2MeSAMP blocked only the adenylyl cyclase inhibition in HORK3-expressing cells, and A3P5PS inhibited only 2MeSADP-induced calcium mobilization in P2Y1-expressing cells with values similar to those previously shown in platelets. PPADS also blocked P2Y1 but not HORK3. PPADS is reported to have the ability to discriminate between P2Y1 and P2TAC: it blocks P2Y1 but has no effect on the P2Y receptor coupled to inhibition of adenylyl cyclase (Boyer et al., 1994). The specificity and potency of antagonists also supported the suggestion that HORK3 is a candidate for P2TAC.
In our data, ATP and 2MeSATP were agonists at both HORK3 and P2Y1. Leon et al. (1997) reported that ATP and 2MeSATP purified from contaminated nucleotide diphosphates by HPLC did not exhibit agonist activity and acted as a weak antagonist at P2Y1. Palmer et al. (1998) proved that ATP is a partial P2Y1 agonist whose capacity to activate calcium mobilization apparently depends on the degree of P2Y1 reserve. In a preliminary experiment, we purified commercial ATP by Mono Q column and compared the potency at P2Y1. Mono Q-purified ATP still-induced calcium mobilization in P2Y1-expressing cells, but the dose-response curve indicated a right shift, suggesting that the agonist activity of ATP and 2MeSATP may be caused by the contaminant products of ATP and 2MeSATP or an unnatural situation of heterologusly overexpression of P2Y1. Further studies are needed to assess whether ATP or 2MeSATP is a real agonist or antagonist at HORK3.
As is often the case with binding studies using cloned P2Y receptors, it is difficult to discriminate between the response of a heterologously expressed P2Y receptor and that of endogenous nucleotide receptors (Schachter and Harden, 1997). We succeeded in the binding studies with cloned HORK3 and P2Y1 using C6–15 cells. Saturation studies demonstrated the existence of two binding sites of [3H]2MeSADP for HORK3 and the elimination of its high-affinity binding sites with GPTγS. Competition binding experiments revealed similar rank orders of potency of agonists and selectivity of antagonists to those obtained in the functional assay, and all agonists competition curves exhibited Hill coefficients less than unity (0.64–0.71). These results are consistent with the suggestion that 2MeSADP may be associated with two affinity state of HORK3. P2Y1-expressing cells, on the other hand, had a single class of binding sites of [3H]2MeSADP. The specific binding was sensitive to GTPγS and competed with agonists and A3P5PS but not by P2TAC antagonists, suggesting the labeling of a G-protein-coupled P2Y1 subset with [3H]2MeSADP. Commonly, a single population of binding sites is observed with an agonist radioligand because accurate binding data at the high concentrations of radioligand required to define low-affinity binding is unobtainable, and it is not possible to determine whether this is a completely coupled ternary complex form or an uncoupled receptor unless an antagonist radioligand is used to determine the receptor population size (Kenakin, 1996). To obtain an accurate Bmax value, a better radioligand seems to be necessary. Binding studies have been performed to analyze the platelet ADP receptors using radiolabeled 2MeSADP in combination with selective antagonists, but there is some discrepancy. Savi et al. (1994) reported that P2Y1 represents about 30% of 2MeSADP binding sites (Kd = 0.9 nM), which shows a high affinity with ADP (Ki = 15 nM), and the remainder are P2TAC(Kd = 0.7 nM), which has a low affinity with ADP (Ki = 486 nM). Gachet et al. (1995) also demonstrated that P2Y1 and P2TAC represent 30 and 70% of 2MeSADP binding sites, respectively, but the Kd vales are about 10 nM and 5 nM, respectively. Jantzen et al. (1999) reported the inconsistent result that the majority of 2MeSADP binding sites (Kd = 0.5 nM) represent P2TAC. In our data, ADP inhibited the binding of [3H]2MeSADP for HORK3 with aKH value of 56 nM and aKL value of 420 nM, and for P2Y1 with a Ki value of 27 nM. These results suggest that P2TAC and P2Y1 have a high and low affinity with [3H]2MeSADP but a low and high affinity with ADP, respectively, supporting the view that P2Y1functions as a high-affinity ADP receptor and P2TAC as a low-affinity ADP receptor in platelets. In addition, our distribution study suggests that P2Y1 and P2TAC may be equivalent in human platelets, but this differs from the results ofSavi et al. (1994), Gachet et al. (1995), and Jantzen et al. (1999). More studies are needed at the protein level to elucidate these discrepancies.
High expression levels of HORK3 and P2Y1 mRNA were detected in the platelets but not in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Jin et al. (1998b) reported that human P2Y1 mRNA is detected in lymphocytes and monocytes. One possible explanation for the difference is that P2Y1 mRNA is at quite a low level in leukocyes, but Jin et al. detected P2Y1 mRNA by using a highly sensitive detection system (RT-PCR-Southern analysis). HORK3 was also highly expressed in the brain. A similar receptor to P2TAC has been identified in the rat glioma cell line (C6–2B) and rat brain microvascular endothelial cell line (B10) (Pianet et al., 1989; Boyer et al., 1993; Webb et al., 1996). The rank order of potencies of nucleotides on adenylyl cyclase inhibition in C6–2B and in B10 are reported to be 2MeSATP = 2MeSADP > ADPβS > 2ClATP = ADP > ATPαS > ATP > UTP and 2ClATP > 2MeSATP > ADP > ATP. Moreover, in B10 cells, suramin and reactive blue 2 blocked its activity, but PPADS did not (Webb et al., 1996). These pharmacological profiles are similar to that of HORK3. It is possible that these P2TAC-like receptors are identical with HORK3.
Two other groups have cloned and characterized the same ADP receptor during the preparation of this manuscript (Zhang et al., 2000;Hollopeter et al., 2001). The relative potency of agonists and antagonists are similar, but we further confirmed the pharmacological characterization containing a ligand binding study compared with the P2Y1 receptor.
Taken together, the results show that HORK3 has the characteristics of the proposed P2TAC receptor in platelets. Further experiments are required to confirm whether HORK3 mediates platelet aggregation and whether ADP receptors in C6–2B or B10 are identical with HORK3. The availability of P2TAC cDNA should provide valuable insight into the physiological and pathological roles of ADP in platelets and central nervous system.
Acknowledgments
We thank Drs. T. Kawasaki, F. Hirayama, and K. Hayashi for their helpful suggestions. We also thank E. Watanabe, K. Aiki, and M. Isshiki for their expert technical assistance and E. Ball for editing the manuscript.
Footnotes
- Abbreviations:
- GPCR
- G protein-coupled receptor
- RACE
- rapid amplification of cDNA ends
- PCR
- polymerase chain reaction
- ORF
- open-reading frame
- IBMX
- 3-isobutyl 1-methylxanthine
- 2MeSADP
- 2-methylthio-ADP
- RT-PCR
- reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction
- PPADS
- pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2′,4′disulfonic acid
- AR-C69931 MX
- N6-[2-methlthio]ethyl]-2-[3,3,3-trifluoropropylthio]-5′-adenylic acid, monohydride with dichloromethylenebiphosphonic acid
- 2MeSATP
- 2-methylthio-ATP
- ADPβS
- adenosine 5′-O-(2-thiodiphosphate)
- 2MeSAMP
- 2-methylthio-AMP
- A3P5PS
- adenosine 3′-phosphate 5′-phosphosulfate
- GTPγS
- guanosine 5′-O-(thiotriphosphate)
- Received February 7, 2001.
- Accepted May 7, 2001.
- The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics