GPR65
Psychosine receptor is a G protein-coupled receptor protein that in humans is encoded by the GPR65 gene. GPR65 is also referred to as TDAG8.
Species, tissue, and subcellular distribution
GPR65 is primarily expressed in lymphoid tissues, and as a GPCR, the protein is localized to the plasma membrane.Function
Ligand binding
In 2001, GPR65 was reported to be a specific receptor for psychosine as well as several other related glycosphingolipids. However, the specific binding of psychosine to GPR65 has been contested as the reported ligand binding did not satisfy the appropriate pharmacological criteria.More recently, 3--1,6-dimethylpyridazinothiadiazin-5-one was found to be a specific agonist for GPR65. Furthermore, 4-methyl-2-pyrimidin-2-yl-1,3-thiazole-5-carboxylate was found to act as a BTB09089 negative allosteric modulator.
pH sensing
GPR65 senses extracellular pH. Levels of cyclic adenosine monophosphate, a secondary messenger associated with activation of GPCRs in the cAMP-dependent pathway, were found to be elevated in neutral to acidic extracellular pH in cells expressing GPR65. In cells with mutated GPR65, this pH-sensing effect was reduced or eliminated. In the presence of psychosine, however, the levels of cAMP increased at a shifted, more acidic pH range. As such, psychosine displayed an inhibitory effect as an antagonist when GPR65 was stimulated with an increasing concentration of protons. This finding directly contested the previous reporting of psychosine as an activating ligand for GPR65.The pH-sensing ability of GPR65 was further tested and confirmed, as it was found that cAMP levels increased when GPR65 was stimulated by pH values less than pH 7.2.
GPR65 senses pH by protonation of histidine residues on its extracellular domain, and when activated, GPR65 enables the downstream signaling through the Gq/11, Gs, and G12/13 pathways. The ability of GPR65 to sense pH can modulate several cellular functions in various biological systems including the immune, cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, and nervous systems.
GPR65's ability to sense pH plays a prominent role in tumor development. GPR65 is highly expressed in a variety of human tumors. Tumor development is associated with low extracellular pH due to changes in metabolism of rapidly dividing cells. GPR65 enables tumor growth by sensing the acidic environment. It was found that overexpression of GPR65 prevents tumor cell death in acidic conditions in vitro and facilitates tumor growth in vivo.