RAT RECOMBINANT GPR40 RECEPTOR

MULTISCREEN™ β-ARRESTIN2 STABLE CELL LINES

Product Information

Catalog Number: CAr1101-1

Lot Number: CAr1101-1-043121

Quantity: 1 vial (2 x 106) frozen cells

Freeze Medium: Cellbanker 2 (Amsbio)

Host cell: CHO-K1 β-Arrestin2

Transfection: Expression vector containing full-length rat GPR40 cDNA (GenBank Accession Number NM_153304) with FLAG tag sequence at N-terminus and ARRB2 cDNA (GenBank Accession Number NM_004313.3)

Propagation Medium: DMEM/F-12, 10% FBS, 10 µg/mL puromycin, 800 µg/mL G418

Recommended Storage: Liquid nitrogen upon receiving

Stability: In progress

Data Sheet

Background: G-protein coupled receptor 40 (GPR40 or FFA1) is specifically expressed in brain and pancreas. In pancreas, abundant GPR40 is localized to insulin-producing beta cells. Long-chain FFAs amplify glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells by activating GPR40, indicating that GPR40 agonists and/or antagonists have potential for the development of new anti-diabetic drugs. GPR40 overexpression in breast cancer cells amplified oleate-induced proliferation, whereas silencing the GPR40 gene decreased it. These results suggest that GPR40 is implicated in the control of breast cancer cell growth by fatty acids and that GPR40 may provide a link between fat and cancer.

Application: Functional assays

Figure 1. Dose-dependent stimulation from arrestin recruitment upon treatment with ligand, monitored on Flexstation III. Figure 2. Dose-dependent stimulation of calcium flux upon treatment with ligand, measured with MULTISCREENTM Calcium 1.0 No Wash Assay Kit (Multispan MSCA01). Figure 3. Receptor expression on cell surface measured by flow cytometry (FACS) using an anti-FLAG antibody. Thin line: parental cells; thick line: receptor-expressing cells.

References:

Briscoe CP et al. (2003) The orphan G protein-coupled receptor GPR40 is activated by medium and long chain fatty acids. J Biol Chem 278:11303-11311.

Steneberg P et al. (2005) The FFA receptor GPR40 links hyperinsulinemia, hepatic steatosis, and impaired glucose homeostasis in mouse. Cell Metab 1:245-258.

Hardy S et al. (2005) Oleate promotes the proliferation of breast cancer cells via the G protein-coupled receptor GPR40. J Biol Chem 280:13285-13291.

FOR RESEARCH USE ONLY.
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