Lysophosphatidylcholine as a ligand for the immunoregulatory receptor G2A

JHS Kabarowski, K Zhu, LQ Le, ON Witte, Y Xu - Science, 2001 - science.org
JHS Kabarowski, K Zhu, LQ Le, ON Witte, Y Xu
Science, 2001science.org
Although the biological actions of the cell membrane and serum lipid
lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) in atherosclerosis and systemic autoimmune disease are
well recognized, LPC has not been linked to a specific cell-surface receptor. We show that
LPC is a high-affinity ligand for G2A, a lymphocyte-expressed G protein–coupled receptor
whose genetic ablation results in the development of autoimmunity. Activation of G2A by
LPC increased intracellular calcium concentration, induced receptor internalization …
Although the biological actions of the cell membrane and serum lipid lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) in atherosclerosis and systemic autoimmune disease are well recognized, LPC has not been linked to a specific cell-surface receptor. We show that LPC is a high-affinity ligand for G2A, a lymphocyte-expressed G protein–coupled receptor whose genetic ablation results in the development of autoimmunity. Activation of G2A by LPC increased intracellular calcium concentration, induced receptor internalization, activated ERK mitogen-activated protein kinase, and modified migratory responses of Jurkat T lymphocytes. This finding implicates a role for LPC-G2A interaction in the etiology of inflammatory autoimmune disease and atherosclerosis.
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