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1.
The two binding sites in the pentameric nicotinic acetylcholine receptor of subunit composition alpha2 beta gamma delta are formed by nonequivalent alpha-gamma and alpha-delta subunit interfaces, which produce site selectivity in the binding of agonists and antagonists. We show by sedimentation analysis that 125I-alpha-conotoxin M1 binds with high affinity to the alpha-delta subunit dimers, but not to alpha-gamma dimers, nor to alpha, gamma, and delta monomers, a finding consistent with alpha-conotoxin M1 selectivity for the alpha delta interface in the intact receptor measured by competition against alpha-bungarotoxin binding. We also extend previous identification of alpha-conotoxin M1 determinants in the gamma and delta subunits to the alpha subunit interface by mutagenesis of conserved residues in the alpha subunit. Most mutations of the alpha subunit affect affinity similarly at the two sites, but Tyr93Phe, Val188Lys, Tyr190Thr, Tyr198Thr, and Asp152Asn affect affinity in a site-selective manner. Mutant cycle analysis reveals only weak or no interactions between mutant alpha and non-alpha subunits, indicating that side chains of the alpha subunit do not interact with those of the gamma or delta subunits in stabilizing alpha-conotoxin M1. The overall findings suggest different binding configurations of alpha-conotoxin M1 at the alpha-delta and alpha-gamma binding interfaces.  相似文献   

2.
Through a study of cloned nicotinic receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes, we provide evidence that alpha-conotoxin ImI, a peptide marine snail toxin that induces seizures in rodents, selectively blocks subtypes of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. alpha-Conotoxin ImI blocks homomeric alpha 7 nicotinic receptors with the highest apparent affinity and homomeric alpha 9 receptors with 8-fold lower affinity. This toxin has no effect on receptors composed of alpha 2 beta 2, alpha 3 beta 2, alpha 4 beta 2, alpha 2 beta 4, alpha 3 beta 4, or alpha 4 beta 4 subunit combinations. In contrast to alpha-bungarotoxin, which has high affinity for alpha 7, alpha 9, and alpha 1 beta 1 gamma delta receptors, alpha-conotoxin ImI has low affinity for the muscle nAChR. Related Conus peptides, alpha-conotoxins MI and GI, exhibit a distinct specificity, strictly targeting the muscle subtype receptor but not alpha 7 or alpha 9 receptors. alpha-Conotoxins thus represent selective tools for the study of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors.  相似文献   

3.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) are activated by ACh binding to two sites located on different alpha subunits. The two alpha subunits, alpha gamma and alpha delta, are distinguished by their interface with gamma and delta subunits. We have characterized the formation of the ACh binding sites and found, contrary to the current model, that the sites form at different times and in a set order. The first site forms on alpha gamma subunits during the process of subunit assembly. Our data are consistent with the appearance of this site on alpha beta gamma delta subunit tetramers soon after the site for the competitive antagonist alpha-bungarotoxin has formed and delta subunits have assembled with alpha beta gamma trimers. The second site is located on alpha delta subunits and forms after AChR subunits have assembled into alpha2 beta gamma delta pentamers. By determining the order in which the ACh binding sites form, we have also identified the sites in which the delta and second alpha subunits associate during subunit assembly.  相似文献   

4.
We recently showed that at desensitized muscle nicotinic receptors, epibatidine selects by 300-fold between the two agonist binding sites. To determine whether receptors in the resting, activatible state show similar site selectivity, we studied epibatidine-induced activation of mouse fetal and adult receptors expressed in 293 HEK cells. Kinetic analysis of single-channel currents reveals that (-)-epibatidine binds with 15-fold selectivity to sites of adult receptors and 75-fold selectivity to sites of fetal receptors. For each receptor subtype, site selectivity arises solely from different rates of epibatidine dissociation from the two sites. To determine the structural basis for epibatidine selectivity, we introduced mutations into either the gamma or the delta subunit and measured epibatidine binding and epibatidine-induced single-channel currents. Complexes formed by alpha and mutant gamma(K34S+F172I) subunits bind epibatidine with increased affinity compared to alphagamma complexes, whereas the kinetics of alpha2betadeltagamma(K34S+F172I) receptors reveal no change in affinity of the low-affinity site, but increased affinity of the high-affinity site. Conversely, complexes formed by alpha and mutant delta(S36K+I178F) subunits bind epibatidine with decreased affinity compared to alphadelta complexes, whereas the kinetics of alpha2betagammadelta(S36K+I178F) and alpha2betaepsilondelta(S36K+I178F) receptors show markedly reduced sensitivity to epibatidine. The overall data show that epibatidine activates muscle receptors by binding with high affinity to alphagamma and alphaepsilon sites, but with low affinity to the alphadelta site.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: The gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A receptor/chloride channel has a broad-spectrum anesthetic sensitivity and is a key regulator of arousal. Each receptor/channel complex is an assembly of five protein subunits. Six subunit classes have been identified, each containing one to six members; many combinations are expressed throughout the brain. Benzodiazepines and intravenous anesthetic agents are clearly subunit dependent, but the literature to date suggests that volatile anesthetics are not. The physiological role of the delta subunit remains enigmatic, and it has not been examined as a determinant of anesthetic sensitivity. METHODS: Combinations of GABA(A) receptor subunit cDNAs were injected into Xenopus laevis oocytes: alpha1beta1, alpha1beta1gamma2L, alpha1beta1delta, and alpha1beta1gamma2Ldelta. Expression of functional ion channels with distinct signalling and pharmacologic properties was demonstrated within 1-4 days by established electrophysiological methods. RESULTS: Co-expression of the delta subunit produced changes in receptor affinity; current density; and the modulatory efficacy of diazepam, zinc, and lanthanum; it also produced subtle changes in the rate of desensitization in response to GABA. Isoflurane enhanced GABA-induced responses from all combinations: alphabeta delta (>10-fold) > alphabeta > alphabeta gamma > or = alphabeta gammadelta (approximately 5-fold). Dose-response plots were bell shaped. Compared with alphabeta gamma receptors (EC50 = 225 microM), both alphabeta delta (EC50 = 372 microM) and alphabeta gammadelta (EC50 = 399 microM) had a reduced affinity for isoflurane. Isoflurane (at a concentration close to the EC50 for each subunit) increased the affinity of GABA for its receptor but depressed the maximal response (alphabeta gamma and alphabeta gammadelta). In contrast, the small currents through alphabeta delta receptors were enhanced, even at saturating agonist concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: Delta subunit expression alters GABA(A) receptor function but is not an absolute determinant of anesthetic sensitivity.  相似文献   

6.
The four subunits (alpha, beta, gamma, delta) of the acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo californica have been isolated by preparative gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate. After removal of the sodium dodecyl sulfate by dialysis of the polypeptides against a cholate-containing buffer, the alpha subunit, but not the other chains, binds 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin in a saturable manner. The binding affinity, 0.1-0.2 microM, is approximately 10(4)-fold lower than that observed for native acetylcholine receptor. For three preparations of alpha subunit, 1 mol of subunit bound 0.87, 0.38, and 0.33 mol of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin at saturation. The binding was inhibited by cholinergic ligands, although the apparent affinities of these ligands for alpha were 50-100-fold lower than that found for the native receptor. These results indicate that at least part of the alpha-bungarotoxin binding site resides on the alpha subunit.  相似文献   

7.
Run-down of L-type Ca2+ channels in CHO cells stably expressing alpha 1c, alpha 1c beta 1a, or alpha 1c beta 1a alpha 2 delta gamma subunits was studied using the patch-clamp technique (single channel recording). The channel activity (NPo) of alpha 1c channels was increased 4- and 8-fold by coexpression with beta 1a and beta 1a alpha 2 delta gamma, respectively. When membranes containing channels composed of different subunits were excised into basic internal solution, the channel activity exhibited run-down, the time-course of which was independent of the subunit composition. The run-down was restored by the application of calpastatin (or calpastatin contained in cytoplasmic P-fraction) + H-fraction (a high molecular mass fraction of bovine cardiac cytoplasm) + 3 mM ATP, which has been shown to reverse the run-down in native Ca2+ channels in the guinea-pig heart. The restoration level was 64.7, 63.5, and 66.4% for channels composed of alpha 1c, alpha 1c beta 1a, and alpha 1c beta 1a alpha 2 delta gamma, respectively, and was thus also independent of the subunit composition. We conclude that run-down of L-type Ca2+ channels occurs via the alpha 1 subunit and that the cytoplasmic factors maintaining Ca2+ channel activity act on the alpha 1 subunit.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions of the F1F0-ATPase subunits between the cytoplasmic domain of the b subunit (residues 26-156, bcyt) and other membrane peripheral subunits including alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon, and putative cytoplasmic domains of the a subunit were analyzed with the yeast two-hybrid system and in vitro reconstitution of ATPase from the purified subunits as well. Only the combination of bcyt fused to the activation domain of the yeast GAL-4, and delta subunit fused to the DNA binding domain resulted in the strong expression of the beta-galactosidase reporter gene, suggesting a specific interaction of these subunits. Expression of bcyt fused to glutathione S-transferase (GST) together with the delta subunit in Escherichia coli resulted in the overproduction of these subunits in soluble form, whereas expression of the GST-bcyt fusion alone had no such effect, indicating that GST-bcyt was protected by the co-expressed delta subunit from proteolytic attack in the cell. These results indicated that the membrane peripheral domain of b subunit stably interacted with the delta subunit in the cell. The affinity purified GST-bcyt did not contain significant amounts of delta, suggesting that the interaction of these subunits was relatively weak. Binding of these subunits observed in a direct binding assay significantly supported the capability of binding of the subunits. The ATPase activity was reconstituted from the purified bcyt together with alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon, or with the same combination except epsilon. Specific elution of the ATPase activity from glutathione affinity column with the addition of glutathione after reconstitution demonstrated that the reconstituted ATPase formed a complex. The result indicated that interaction of b and delta was stabilized by F1 subunits other than epsilon and also suggested that b-delta interaction was important for F1-F0 interaction.  相似文献   

9.
We have isolated a 16-amino acid peptide from the venom of the marine snail Conus magus which potently blocks nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) composed of alpha3beta2 subunits. This peptide, named alpha-conotoxin MII, was identified by electrophysiologically screening venom fractions against cloned nicotinic receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The peptide's structure, which has been confirmed by mass spectrometry and total chemical synthesis, differs significantly from those of all previously isolated alpha-conotoxins. Disulfide bridging, however, is conserved. The toxin blocks the response to acetylcholine in oocytes expressing alpha3beta2 nAChRs with an IC50 of 0.5 nM and is 2-4 orders of magnitude less potent on other nAChR subunit combinations. We have recently reported the isolation and characterization of alpha-conotoxin ImI, which selectively targets homomeric alpha7 neuronal nAChRs. Yet other alpha-conotoxins selectively block the muscle subtype of nAChR. Thus, it is increasingly apparent that alpha-conotoxins represent a significant resource for ligands with which to probe structure-function relationships of various nAChR subtypes.  相似文献   

10.
Pharmacological analyses of gamma-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) receptor subtypes have suggested that both the alpha and gamma subunits, but not the beta subunit, contribute to the benzodiazepine binding site. We took advantage of the different pharmacological properties conferred by the inclusion of different gamma subunits in the receptor macromolecule to identify amino acids gamma2Phe77 and gamma2Met130 as key determinants of the benzodiazepine binding site. gamma2Phe77 was required for high affinity binding of the benzodiazepine site ligands flumazenil, CL218,872, and methyl-beta-carboline-3-carboxylate but not flunitrazepam. This amino acid was, however, required for allosteric modulation by flunitrazepam, as well as other benzodiazepine site ligands. In contrast, gamma2Met130 was required for high affinity binding of flunitrazepam, clonazepam, and triazolam but not flumazenil, CL218, 872, or methyl-beta-carboline-3-carboxylate and did not affect benzodiazepine efficacy. Introduction of the phenylalanine and methionine into the appropriate positions of gamma1 was not sufficient to confer high affinity for the benzodiazepine site ligand zolpidem. These data show that gamma2Phe77 and gamma2Met130 are necessary for high affinity binding of a number of benzodiazepine site ligands. Although most previous studies have focused on the contribution of the alpha subunit, we demonstrated a critical role for the gamma subunit at the benzodiazepine binding site, indicating that this modulatory site is located at the interface of these two subunits. Furthermore, gamma2Phe77 is homologous to alpha1Phe64, which has been previously shown to be a key determinant of the GABA binding site, suggesting a conservation of motifs between different ligand binding sites on the GABAA receptor.  相似文献   

11.
Cysteine was introduced from residues 116 to 121 of the gamma subunit of the fetal mouse acetylcholine receptor, and the mutant receptors were treated with methanethiosulfonate reagents and examined for changes in ligand binding properties. Of the 18 combinations of mutant and reagent, only receptors harboring gammaL119C treated with the quaternary ammonium reagent MTSET (trimethylammonium-ethyl methanethiosulfonate) show a decreased number of alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-btx) sites. The decrease of 50% suggests that alpha-btx binding to the site harboring gammaL119C is blocked. Analysis of binding of the site-selective ligands dimethyl-d-tubocurarine (DMT) and alpha-conotoxin M1 (CTX) confirm specificity of modification for the site harboring gammaL119C. Cysteines placed at equivalent positions of the delta and epsilon subunits also lead to selective loss of alpha-btx binding following MTSET treatment. gammaL119C receptors treated with the primary amine reagent MTSEA (aminoethyl methanethiosulfonate) retain alpha-btx binding to both sites but show reduced affinity for DMT and CTX at the modified site. Lysine mutagenesis of Leugamma119, Leudelta121, and Leuepsilon119 mimics MTSEA treatment, whereas mutagenesis of Thralpha119 and Glnbeta119 is without effect, demonstrating subunit and residue specificity of MTSEA modification. MTSET modification of nearby gammaY117C does not block alpha-btx binding but markedly diminishes affinity for DMT and CTX. The overall findings indicate a localized point of interaction between alpha-btx and the modified gammaL119C, deltaL121C, and epsilonL119C.  相似文献   

12.
The three possible disulfide bonded isomers of alpha-conotoxin GI have been selectively synthesised and their structures determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy. alpha-Conotoxin GI derives from the venom of Conus geographus and is a useful neuropharmacological tool as it selectively binds to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR), a ligand-gated ion channel involved in nerve signal transmission. The peptide has the sequence ECCNPACGRHYSC-NH2, and the three disulfide bonded isomers are referred to as GI(2-7;3-13), GI(2-13;3-7) and GI(2-3;7-13). The NMR structure for the native isomer GI(2-7;3-13) is of excellent quality, with a backbone pairwise RMSD of 0.16 A for a family of 35 structures, and comprises primarily a distorted 310 helix between residues 5 to 11. The two non-native isomers exhibit multiple conformers in solution, with the major populated forms being different in structure both from each other and from the native form. Structure-activity relationships for the native GI(2-7;3-13) as well as the role of the disulfide bonds on folding and stability of the three isomers are examined. It is concluded that the disulfide bonds in alpha-conotoxin GI play a crucial part in determining both the structure and stability of the peptide. A trend for increased conformational heterogeneity was observed in the order of GI(2-7;3-13)相似文献   

13.
Cerebellar granule cells express six GABAA receptor subunits abundantly (alpha1, alpha6, beta2, beta3, gamma2, and delta) and assemble various pentameric receptor subtypes with unknown subunit compositions; however, the rules guiding receptor subunit assembly are unclear. Here, removal of intact alpha6 protein from cerebellar granule cells allowed perturbations in other subunit levels to be studied. Exon 8 of the mouse alpha6 subunit gene was disrupted by homologous recombination. In alpha6 -/- granule cells, the delta subunit was selectively degraded as seen by immunoprecipitation, immunocytochemistry, and immunoblot analysis with delta subunit-specific antibodies. The delta subunit mRNA was present at wild-type levels in the mutant granule cells, indicating a post-translational loss of the delta subunit. These results provide genetic evidence for a specific association between the alpha6 and delta subunits. Because in alpha6 -/- neurons the remaining alpha1, beta2/3, and gamma2 subunits cannot rescue the delta subunit, certain potential subunit combinations may not be found in wild-type cells.  相似文献   

14.
Different photoactivatable derivatives of toxin 3 (CTX) Naja naja siamensis were obtained after CTX reaction with N-hydroxysuccinimide esters of p-azidobenzoic, p-azidotetraflourobenzoic, p-benzoylbenzoic and p-[3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl]benzoic acids. The ion-exchange HPLC profiles for the reaction products were very similar in four cases, with one predominant peak corresponding to the derivative containing the label at Lys23. After [125I]iodination, CTX photoactivatable derivatives were cross-linked to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo californica under optimized conditions. The highest cross-linking yield (up to 16% of the bound toxin) was observed for azidobenzoyl-Lys23-CTX. Different receptor subunits were found to be labelled depending on the nature of the photoactivatable group: the azido derivatives labelled the gamma and delta subunits, benzoylbenzoyl derivative labelled the alpha and delta subunits, while p-[3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl]benzoyl derivative reacted with alpha, gamma and delta subunits. The cross-linking experiments in the presence of varying concentrations of (+)-tubocurarine demonstrated that the Lys23-attached diazirinyl group contacts the delta and alpha subunits in one ligand-binding site, whereas at the other site, for another CTX molecule, the contacts of the Lys23-diazirinyl are with gamma and alpha subunits. This means that the central loop in the two CTX molecules binds at the alpha/gamma and alpha/delta interfaces. Calculation of the sterically possible displacement of diazirinyl nitrogen, basing on the known X-ray structure of CTX, showed that this value does not exceed 13 A. The results obtained favor the disposition of the ligand-binding sites at the subunit interfaces, with the distance between alpha and delta, or alpha and gamma subunits at these sites being not more than 13 A.  相似文献   

15.
Agonist-bound heptahelical receptors activate heterotrimeric G proteins by catalyzing exchange of GDP for GTP on their alpha subunits. In search of an approximation of the receptor-alpha subunit complex, we have considered the properties of A326S Gialpha1, a mutation discovered originally in Gsalpha (Iiri, T., Herzmark, P., Nakamoto, J. M., Van Dop, C., and Bourne, H. R. (1994) Nature 371, 164-168) that mimics the effect of receptor on nucleotide exchange. The mutation accelerates dissociation of GDP from the alphai1beta1gamma2 heterotrimer by 250-fold. Nevertheless, affinity of mutant Gialpha1 for GTPgammaS is high in the presence of Mg2+, and the mutation has no effect on the intrinsic GTPase activity of the alpha subunit. The mutation also uncouples two activities of betagamma: stabilization of the GDP-bound alpha subunit (which is retained) and retardation of GDP dissociation from the heterotrimer (which is lost). For wild-type and mutant Gialpha1, beta gamma prevents irreversible inactivation of the alpha subunit at 30 degreesC. However, the mutation accelerates irreversible inactivation of alpha at 37 degreesC despite the presence of beta gamma. Structurally, the mutation weakens affinity for GTPgammaS by steric crowding: a 2-fold increase in the number of close contacts between the protein and the purine ring of the nucleotide. By contrast, we observe no differences in structure at the GDP binding site between wild-type heterotrimers and those containing A326S Gialpha1. However, the GDP binding site is only partially occupied in crystals of G protein heterotrimers containing A326S Gialpha1. In contrast to original speculations about the structural correlates of receptor-catalyzed nucleotide exchange, rapid dissociation of GDP can be observed in the absence of substantial structural alteration of a Galpha subunit in the GDP-bound state.  相似文献   

16.
The vast molecular heterogeneity of brain gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors forms the basis for receptor subtyping. Using autoradiographic techniques, we established the characteristics of cerebellar granule cell GABAA receptors by comparing wild-type mice with those with a targeted disruption of the alpha6 subunit gene. Cerebellar granule cells of alpha6(-/-) animals have severe deficits in high affinity [3H]muscimol and [3H]SR 95531 binding to GABA sites, in agonist-insensitive [3H]Ro 15-4513 binding to benzodiazepine sites, and in furosemide-induced increases in tert-[35S]butylbicyclophosphorothionate binding to picrotoxin-sensitive convulsant sites. These observations agree with the known specific properties of these sites on recombinant alpha6beta2/3gamma2 receptors. In the presence of GABA concentrations that fail to activate alpha1 subunit-containing receptors, methyl-6,7-dimethoxy-4-ethyl-beta-carboline (30 microM), allopregnanolone (100 nM), and Zn2+ (10 microM) are less efficacious in altering tert-[35S]butylbicyclophosphorothionate binding in the granule cell layer of the alpha6(-/-) than alpha6(+/+) animals. These data concur with the deficiency of the cerebellar alpha6 and delta subunit-containing receptors in the alpha6(-/-) animals and could also account for the decreased affinity of [3H]muscimol binding to alpha6(-/-) cerebellar membranes. Predicted additional alterations in the cerebellar receptors of the mutant mice may explain a surplus of methyl-6,7-dimethoxy-4-ethyl-beta-carboline-insensitive receptors in the alpha6(-/-) granule cell layer and an increased diazepam-sensitivity in the molecular layer. These changes may be adaptive consequences of altered GABAA receptor subunit expression patterns in response to the loss of two subunits (alpha and delta) from granule cells.  相似文献   

17.
The anti-epileptic, anti-hyperalgesic, and anxiolytic agent gabapentin (1-(aminomethyl)-cyclohexane acetic acid or Neurontin) has previously been shown to bind with high affinity to the alpha2delta subunit of voltage-dependent calcium channels (Gee, N. S. , Brown, J. P., Dissanayake, V. U. K., Offord, J., Thurlow, R., and Woodruff, G.N. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 5768-5776). We report here the cloning, sequencing, and deletion mutagenesis of the alpha2delta subunit from porcine brain. The deduced protein sequence has a 95.9 and 98.2% identity to the rat and human neuronal alpha2 delta sequences, respectively. [3H]Gabapentin binds with a KD of 37.5 +/- 10.4 nM to membranes prepared from COS-7 cells transfected with wild-type porcine alpha2 delta cDNA. Six deletion mutants (B-G) that lack the delta polypeptide, together with varying amounts of the alpha2 component, failed to bind [3H]gabapentin. C-terminal deletion mutagenesis of the delta polypeptide identified a segment (residues 960-994) required for correct assembly of the [3H]gabapentin binding pocket. Mutant L, which lacks the putative membrane anchor in the delta sequence, was found in both membrane-associated and soluble secreted forms. The soluble form was not proteolytically cleaved into separate alpha2 and delta chains but still retained a high affinity (KD = 30.7 +/- 8.1 nM) for [3H]gabapentin. The production of a soluble alpha2delta mutant supports the single transmembrane model of the alpha2 delta subunit and is an important step toward the large-scale recombinant expression of the protein.  相似文献   

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