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Published February 2007 | Accepted Version
Journal Article Open

Functional selectivity of dopamine D_1 receptor agonists in regulating the fate of internalized receptors

Abstract

Recently, we demonstrated that D_1 agonists can cause functionally selective effects when the endpoints of receptor internalization and adenylate cyclase activation are compared. The present study was designed to probe the phenomenon of functional selectivity at the D1 receptor further by testing the hypothesis that structurally dissimilar agonists with efficacies at these endpoints that equal or exceed those of dopamine would differ in ability to influence receptor fate after internalization, a functional endpoint largely unexplored for the D_1 receptor. We selected two novel agonists of therapeutic interest that meet these criteria (the isochroman A-77636, and the isoquinoline dinapsoline), and compared the fates of the D_1 receptor after internalization in response to these two compounds with that of dopamine. We found that dopamine caused the receptor to be rapidly recycled to the cell surface within 1 h of removal. Conversely, A-77636 caused the receptor to be retained intracellularly up to 48 h after agonist removal. Most surprisingly, the D_1 receptor recovered to the cell surface 48 h after removal of dinapsoline. Taken together, these data indicate that these agonists target the D1 receptor to different intracellular trafficking pathways, demonstrating that the phenomenon of functional selectivity at the D_1 receptor is operative for cellular events that are temporally downstream of immediate receptor activation. We hypothesize that these differential effects result from interactions of the synthetic ligands with aspects of the D_1 receptor that are distal from the ligand binding domain.

Additional Information

© 2006 Elsevier Ltd. Received 27 April 2006, Revised 29 August 2006, Accepted 30 August 2006, Available online 24 October 2006. The confocal data were obtained at the Michael Hooker Microscopy Facility at UNC-Chapel Hill. This work was supported by NIH research grants NS039036 (RM), MH040537 (RM), and MH073910 (WCG,RM), and training grants ES007126 and NS007431.

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August 22, 2023
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