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      Characterization of a novel subtype of human G protein-coupled receptor for lysophosphatidic acid.

      The Journal of Biological Chemistry
      Amino Acid Sequence, Cloning, Molecular, DNA, Complementary, analysis, genetics, GTP-Binding Proteins, Humans, Jurkat Cells, Lysophospholipids, metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Organ Specificity, RNA, Messenger, biosynthesis, Receptors, Cell Surface, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled, Receptors, Lysophosphatidic Acid, Sequence Alignment

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          Abstract

          The recent identification of the Vzg-1/Edg2 protein as a functional G protein-coupled receptor for lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) has allowed a sequence-based search for new genes that may encode novel subtypes of LPA receptors. A human cDNA encoding a G protein-coupled receptor, designated Edg4, was identified by searching the GenBankTM for homologs of the human Edg2 LPA receptor. The Edg4 protein is 46% identical and 72% similar in amino acid sequence to human Edg2. When overexpressed in Jurkat T cells, the Edg4 protein mediated LPA-induced activation of a serum response element reporter gene with LPA concentration dependence (EC50 of 10 nM) and specificity. This LPA-induced reporter gene activation could be partially inhibited by pretreatment with pertussis toxin or C3 exoenzyme, suggesting requirements for both a Gi protein and Rho GTPase. Overexpression of Edg4 in Jurkat cells also led to increases in specific binding sites for [3H]LPA. Northern blots revealed that two edg4 mRNA transcripts of 1.8 and 8 kilobases are distributed very differently from edg2 mRNAs in adult human tissues and several cancer cell lines. The existence and distinctive tissue expression of structurally different subtypes of LPA receptors may provide one basis for tissue-specific functions and permit independent regulation of each subtype of LPA receptor.

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