The Role of Rho in G Protein-Coupled Receptor Signal Transduction

Abstract
Low molecular weight G proteins of the Rho subfamily are regulators of actin cytoskeletal organization. In contrast to the heterotrimeric G proteins, the small GTPases are not directly activated through ligand binding to G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs). However, a subset of GPCRs, including those for lysophosphatidic acid and thrombin, induce stress fibers, focal adhesions, and cell rounding through Rho-dependent pathways. C3 exoenzyme has been a useful tool for demonstrating Rho involvement in these and other responses, including Ca2+sensitization of smooth muscle contraction, cell migration, transformation, and serum response element–mediated gene expression. Most of the GPCRs that induce Rho-dependent responses can activate Gq, but this is not a sufficient signal. Recent data demonstrate that Gα12/13can induce Rho-dependent responses. Furthermore, Gα12/13can bind and activate Rho-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factors, providing a mechanism by which GPCRs that couple to Gα12/13could activate Rho and its downstream responses.

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