首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Mutations that impair the expression and/or function of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors can lead to epilepsy. The familial epilepsy gamma2(K289M) mutation affects a basic residue conserved in the TM2-3 linker of most GABAA subunits. We investigated the effect on expression and function of the Lys --> Met mutation in mouse alpha1(K278M), beta2(K274M), and gamma2(K289M) subunits. Compared with cells expressing wild-type and alpha1beta2gamma2(K289M) receptors, cells expressing alpha1(K278M)beta2gamma2 and alpha1beta2(K274M)gamma2 receptors exhibited reduced agonist-evoked current density and reduced GABA potency, with no change in single channel conductance. The low current density of alpha1beta2(K274M)gamma2 receptors coincided with reduced surface expression. By contrast the surface expression of alpha1(K278M)beta2gamma2 receptors was similar to wild-type and alpha1beta2gamma2(K289M) receptors suggesting that the alpha1(K278M) impairs function. In keeping with this interpretation GABA-activated channels mediated by alpha1(K278M)beta2gamma2 receptors had brief open times. To a lesser extent gamma2(K289M) also reduced mean open time, whereas beta2(K274M) had no effect. We used propofol as an alternative GABAA receptor agonist to test whether the functional deficits of mutant subunits were specific to GABA activation. Propofol was less potent as an activator of alpha1(K278M)beta2gamma2 receptors. By contrast, neither beta2(K274M) nor gamma2(K289M) affected the potency of propofol. The beta2(K274M) construct was unique in that it reduced the efficacy of propofol activation relative to GABA. These data suggest that the alpha1 subunit Lys-278 residue plays a pivotal role in channel gating that is not dependent on occupancy of the GABA binding site. Moreover, the conserved TM2-3 loop lysine has an asymmetric function in different GABAA subunits.  相似文献   

2.
On high- and low-affinity agonist sites in GABAA receptors   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
GABAA receptors are activated via low-affinity binding sites for the agonists GABA or muscimol. Evidence has been provided that the amino acid residue alpha 1F64 located at the beta2(+)/alpha1(-) subunit interface forms part of this binding site. In radioactive ligand binding studies the agonist [3H]muscimol has been found to interact with the receptor via a high-affinity binding site. This site has been interpreted as a conformational variant of the low-affinity site. Alternatively, the high-affinity binding site has been located to the alpha1(+)/beta2(-) interface and the homologous residue to alpha 1F64, beta 2Y62 has been proposed to constitute an important part of this site. Here we investigated the effect of the point mutation alpha 1F64L and the homologous mutation beta 2Y62L on agonist and antagonist binding and functional properties in alpha 1 beta 2 gamma 2 GABAA receptors. While the mutation in the alpha1 subunit had drastic consequences on all studied properties, including desensitization, the mutation in the beta2 subunit had little consequence. Our observations are relevant for the relative location of high- and low-affinity agonist sites in GABAA receptors.  相似文献   

3.
Y Chang  DS Weiss 《Biophysical journal》1999,77(5):2542-2551
A conserved leucine residue in the midpoint of the second transmembrane domain (M2) of the ligand-activated ion channel family has been proposed to play an important role in receptor activation. In this study, we assessed the importance of this leucine in the activation of rat alpha1beta2gamma2 GABA receptors expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes by site-directed mutagenesis and two-electrode voltage clamp. The hydrophobic conserved M2 leucines in alpha1(L263), beta2(L259), and gamma2(L274) subunits were mutated to the hydrophilic amino acid residue serine and coexpressed in all possible combinations with their wild-type and/or mutant counterparts. The mutation in any one subunit decreased the EC(50) and created spontaneous openings that were blocked by picrotoxin and, surprisingly, by the competitive antagonist bicuculline. The magnitudes of the shifts in GABA EC(50) and picrotoxin IC(50) as well as the degree of spontaneous openings were all correlated with the number of subunits carrying the leucine mutation. Simultaneous mutation of the GABA binding site (beta2Y157S; increased the EC(50)) and the conserved M2 leucine (beta2L259S; decreased the EC(50)) produced receptors with the predicted intermediate agonist sensitivity, indicating the two mutations affect binding and gating independently. The results are discussed in light of a proposed allosteric activation mechanism.  相似文献   

4.
We have expressed the alpha4beta3delta and alpha4beta3gamma2L subtypes of the rat GABAA receptor in Xenopus oocytes and have investigated their agonist activation properties. GABA was a more potent agonist of the alpha4beta3delta receptor (EC50 approximately 1.4 micromol/L) than of the alpha4beta3gamma2L subtype (EC50 approximately 27.6 micromol/L). Other GABAA receptor agonists (muscimol, 4,5,6,7-tetrahydroisoxazolo[5,4-c]pyridin-3-ol, imidazole-4-amino acid) displayed similar subtype selectivity. The structural determinants underlying these differences have been investigated by co-expressing chimeric delta/gamma2L subunits with alpha4 and beta3 subunits. A stretch of amino acids in the delta subunit, S238-V264, is shown to play an important role in determining both agonist potency and the efficacies of full or partial agonists. This segment includes transmembrane domain 1 and the short intracellular loop that leads to the second transmembrane domain. The effects of the competitive antagonists, bicuculline and SR95531, and the channel blocker, picrotoxin, were not significantly affected by the incorporation of chimeric subunits. As the delta and gamma2L subunits have not been previously implicated directly in agonist binding, we suggest that the effects are likely to arise from changes in the transduction mechanisms that link agonist binding to channel activation.  相似文献   

5.
Alanine-scanning mutagenesis and the whole cell voltage clamp technique were used to investigate the function of the extracellular loop between the second and third transmembrane domains (TM2-TM3) of the gamma-aminobutyric acid type A receptor (GABA(A)-R). A conserved arginine residue in the TM2-TM3 loop of the GABA(A)-R alpha(2) subunit was mutated to alanine, and the mutant alpha(2)(R274A) was co-expressed with wild-type beta(1) and gamma(2S) subunits in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells. The GABA EC(50) was increased by about 27-fold in the mutant receptor relative to receptors containing a wild-type alpha(2) subunit. Similarly, the GABA EC(50) at alpha(2)(L277A)beta(1)gamma(2S) and alpha(2)(K279A)beta(1)gamma(2S) GABA(A)-R combinations was increased by 51- and 4-fold, respectively. The alpha(2)(R274A) or alpha(2)(L277A) mutations also reduced the maximal response of piperidine-4-sulfonic acid relative to GABA by converting piperidine-4-sulfonic acid into a weak partial agonist at the GABA(A)-R. Based on these results, we propose that alpha(2)(Arg-274) and alpha(2)(Leu-277) are crucial to the efficient transduction of agonist binding into channel gating at the GABA(A)-R.  相似文献   

6.
In alpha1, beta2, and gamma2 subunits of the gamma-aminobutyric acid A (GABA(A)) receptor, a conserved lysine residue occupies the position in the middle of the predicted extracellular loop between the transmembrane M2 and M3 regions. In all three subunits, this residue was mutated to alanine. Whereas the mutation in alpha1 and beta2 subunits resulted each in about a sixfold shift of the concentration-response curve for GABA to higher concentrations, no significant effect by mutation in the gamma subunit was detected. The affinity for the competitive inhibitor bicuculline methiodide was not affected by the mutations in either the alpha1 subunit or the beta2 subunit. Concentration-response curves for channel activation by pentobarbital were also shifted to higher concentrations by the mutation in the alpha and beta subunits. Binding of [3H]Ro 15-1788 was unaffected by the mutation in the alpha subunit, whereas the binding of [3H]muscimol was shifted to lower affinity. Mutation of the residue in the alpha1 subunit to E, Q, or R resulted in an about eight-, 10-, or fivefold shift, respectively, to higher concentrations of the concentration-response curve for GABA. From these observations, it is concluded that the corresponding residues on the alpha1 and beta2 subunits are involved more likely in the gating of the channel by GABA than in the binding of GABA or benzodiazepines.  相似文献   

7.
Activation of protein kinase C (PKC) results in down-modulation of the gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptor. In this study, the recombinant subunit combination alpha 1 beta 2 gamma 2S was expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The resulting channel was shown to be modulated by 2 microM oleoylacetylglycerol or, stereo-specifically, by low concentrations (10 nM) of the phorbol ester 4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. By site-specific mutagenesis, we altered the serine or threonine residues of consensus phosphorylation sites for PKC in the large, intracellular domain of alpha 1, beta 2, and gamma 2S. Mutant subunits were co-expressed with wild type subunits to yield alpha 1 beta 2 gamma 2S combinations. All of the tested 14 mutations did not affect the level of expression of GABA current. Two of these mutations, Ser-410 in beta 2 and Ser-327 in gamma 2S, resulted in a significant reduction of the effect of the activator of PKC, 4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, on the GABA current amplitude. Thus, we have identified two single serine residues, Ser-410 in the subunit beta 2 and Ser-327 in gamma 2S, as phosphorylation sites of a PKC endogenous to Xenopus oocytes. Co-expression of the mutant subunits suggests that phosphorylation of both sites is required for a full, PKC-mediated down-regulation of GABA currents.  相似文献   

8.
The identification of residues that line neurotransmitter-binding sites and catalyze allosteric transitions that result in channel gating is crucial for understanding ligand-gated ion channel function. In this study, we used the substituted cysteine accessibility method and two-electrode voltage clamp to identify novel gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-binding site residues and to elucidate the secondary structure of the Trp(92)-Asp(101) region of the beta(2) subunit. Each residue was mutated individually to cysteine and expressed with wild-type alpha(1) subunits in Xenopus oocytes. GABA-gated currents (I(GABA)) were measured before and after exposure to the sulfhydryl reagent, N-biotinylaminoethyl methanethiosulfonate (MTS). V93C, D95C, Y97C, and L99C are accessible to derivatization. This pattern of accessibility is consistent with beta(2)Val(93)-Leu(99) adopting a beta-strand conformation. Both GABA and SR95531 protect Y97C and L99C from modification, indicating that these two residues line the GABA-binding site. In D95C-containing receptors, application of MTS in the presence of SR95531 causes a greater effect on I(GABA) than MTS alone, suggesting that binding of a competitive antagonist can cause movements in the binding site. In addition, we present evidence that beta(2)L99C homomers form spontaneously open channels. Thus, mutation of a binding site residue can alter channel gating, which implies that Leu(99) may be important for coupling agonist binding to channel gating.  相似文献   

9.
Ligand-gated ion channels respond to specific neurotransmitters by transiently opening an integral membrane ion-selective pore, allowing ions to move down their electrochemical gradient. A distinguishing feature of all members of the ligand-gated ion channel superfamily is the presence of a 13-amino acid disulfide loop (Cys-loop) in the extracellular ligand-binding domain. Structural data derived from the acetylcholine receptor place this loop at the interface between the ligand-binding domain and the transmembrane pore-forming domain where it is ideally located to participate in coupling ligand binding to channel opening. We have introduced specific mutations into a conserved motif at the mid-point of the Cys-loop of the GABA A receptor subunits alpha1, beta2 and gamma2S where the sequence reads aromatic, proline, aliphatic (ArProAl motif). Receptors carrying a mutation in the Cys-loop of one of their subunits were expressed in L929 cells and responses to both GABA and drugs were assessed using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. Drug potentiation and direct activation were significantly enhanced by mutations in this Cys-loop but these effects were subunit-dependent. Currents in response to agonists were larger when mutations were carried in the alpha and beta subunits but not in the gamma subunit. In contrast, potentiation of current responses by diazepam, etomidate and pentobarbital were all enhanced when mutations were carried in the alpha and gamma subunits, but not the beta subunit. Since the disruption of interactions mediated through the ArProAl motif enhances the mutant receptor's response to both agonist and drugs we suggest that this motif in the Cys-loop of the wild-type receptor participates in interactions that create activation barriers to conformational changes during channel gating.  相似文献   

10.
A cDNA encoding a protein with 70% amino acid identity to the previously characterized gamma-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) receptor alpha-subunits was isolated from a rat brain cDNA library by homology screening. As observed for alpha 1-, alpha 2-, and alpha 3-subunits, coexpression of this new alpha-subunit (alpha 5) with a beta- and gamma 2-subunit in cultured cells produces receptors displaying high-affinity binding sites for both muscimol, a GABA agonist, and benzodiazepines. Characteristic of GABAA/benzodiazepine type II sites, receptors containing alpha 2-, alpha 3- or alpha 5-subunits have low affinities for several type I-selective compounds. However, alpha 5-subunit-containing receptors have lower affinities for zolpidem (30-fold) and Cl 218 872 (three-fold) than measured previously using recombinantly expressed type II receptors containing either alpha 2- or alpha 3-subunits. Based on these findings, a reclassification of the GABAA/benzodiazepine receptors is warranted.  相似文献   

11.
The subunit combinations alpha1beta2gamma2, alpha6beta2gamma2, and alpha1alpha6beta2gamma2 of the GABA(A) receptor were functionally expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The properties of the resulting ion currents were characterized by using electrophysiological techniques. The concentration-response curve of the channel agonist GABA for alpha1alpha6beta2gamma2 showed a single apparent component characterized by an EC(50) of 107 +/- 26 microM (n = 4). It was different from the one for alpha1beta2gamma2, which had an EC(50) of 41 +/- 9 microM (n = 4), that for alpha6beta2gamma2, with an EC(50) of 6.7 +/- 1.9 microM (n = 5), and those for alpha1beta2 and alpha1alpha6beta2. There was no appreciable functional expression of alpha6beta2. Allosteric responses of alpha1alpha6beta2gamma2 to diazepam were intermediate to those of alpha1beta2gamma2 and alpha6beta2gamma2, and allosteric responses to flumazenil were comparable to the ones for alpha1beta2gamma2. The inhibition by furosemide of the currents elicited by GABA in alpha1alpha6beta2gamma2 [IC(50) = 298 +/- 116 microM (n = 7), assuming only one component] was not identical with inhibition of alpha6beta2gamma2 (IC(50) = 38 +/- 2 microM, n = 4), alpha1beta2gamma2 (IC(50) = 5,610 +/- 910 microM, n = 5), or a mixture of these components (assuming two components). These findings indicate unambiguously the formation of functional GABA(A) receptors containing two different alpha subunits, alpha1 and alpha6, with properties different from those of alpha1beta2gamma2 and alpha6beta2gamma2. Furthermore, we provide evidence for the facts that in the Xenopus oocyte (a) the formation of the different receptor types depends on the relative abundance of cRNAs coding for the different receptor subunits and (b) that functional dual subunit combinations alphabeta do not form in the presence of cRNA coding for the gamma subunit.  相似文献   

12.
At clinical concentrations, the potent intravenous general anesthetic etomidate enhances gamma-aminobutyric acid, type A (GABA(A)) receptor activity elicited with low gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) concentrations, whereas much higher etomidate concentrations activate receptors in the absence of GABA. Therefore, GABA(A) receptors may possess two types of etomidate sites: high affinity GABA-modulating sites and low affinity channel-activating sites. However, GABA modulation and direct activation share stereoselectivity for the (R)(+)-etomidate isomer and display parallel dependence on GABA(A) beta subunit isoforms, suggesting that these two actions may be mediated by a single class of etomidate site(s) that exert one or more molecular effects. In this study, we assessed GABA modulation by etomidate using leftward shifts of electrophysiological GABA concentration responses in cells expressing human alpha1beta2gamma2L receptors. Etomidate at up to 100 microm reduced GABA EC(50) values by over 100-fold but without apparent saturation, indicating the absence of high affinity etomidate sites. In experiments using a partial agonist, P4S, etomidate both reduced EC(50) and increased maximal efficacy, demonstrating that etomidate shifts the GABA(A) receptor gating equilibrium toward open states. Results were quantitatively analyzed using equilibrium receptor gating models, wherein a postulated class of equivalent etomidate sites both directly activates receptors and enhances agonist gating. A Monod-Wyman-Changeux co-agonist mechanism with two equivalent etomidate sites that allosterically enhance GABA(A) receptor gating independently of agonist binding most simply accounts for direct activation and agonist modulation. This model also correctly predicts the actions of etomidate on GABA(A) receptors containing a point mutation that increases constitutive gating activity.  相似文献   

13.
We describe the functional consequences of mutations in the linker between the second and third transmembrane segments (M2-M3L) of muscle acetylcholine receptors at the single-channel level. Hydrophobic mutations (Ile, Cys, and Phe) placed near the middle of the linker of the alpha subunit (alphaS269) prolong apparent openings elicited by low concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh), whereas hydrophilic mutations (Asp, Lys, and Gln) are without effect. Because the gating kinetics of the alphaS269I receptor (a congenital myasthenic syndrome mutant) in the presence of ACh are too fast, choline was used as the agonist. This revealed an approximately 92-fold increased gating equilibrium constant, which is consistent with an approximately 10-fold decreased EC(50) in the presence of ACh. With choline, this mutation accelerates channel opening approximately 28-fold, slows channel closing approximately 3-fold, but does not affect agonist binding to the closed state. These ratios suggest that, with ACh, alphaS269I acetylcholine receptors open at a rate of approximately 1.4 x 10(6) s(-1) and close at a rate of approximately 760 s(-1). These gating rate constants, together with the measured duration of apparent openings at low ACh concentrations, further suggest that ACh dissociates from the diliganded open receptor at a rate of approximately 140 s(-1). Ile mutations at positions flanking alphaS269 impair, rather than enhance, channel gating. Inserting or deleting one residue from this linker in the alpha subunit increased and decreased, respectively, the apparent open time approximately twofold. Contrary to the alphaS269I mutation, Ile mutations at equivalent positions of the beta, straightepsilon, and delta subunits do not affect apparent open-channel lifetimes. However, in beta and straightepsilon, shifting the mutation one residue to the NH(2)-terminal end enhances channel gating. The overall results indicate that this linker is a control element whose hydrophobicity determines channel gating in a position- and subunit-dependent manner. Characterization of the transition state of the gating reaction suggests that during channel opening the M2-M3L of the alpha subunit moves before the corresponding linkers of the beta and straightepsilon subunits.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of the enantiomers of (+/-)-CAMP and (+/-)-TAMP [(+/-)-cis- and (+/-)-trans-2-aminomethylcyclopropanecarboxylic acids, respectively], which are cyclopropane analogues of GABA, were tested on GABA(A) and GABA(C) receptors expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes using two-electrode voltage clamp methods. (+)-CAMP was found to be a potent and full agonist at homooligomeric GABA(C) receptors (K:(D) approximately 40 microM: and I:(max) approximately 100% at rho(1); K:(D) approximately 17 microM: and I:(max) approximately 100% at rho(2)) but a very weak antagonist at alpha(1)beta(2)gamma(2L) GABA(A) receptors. In contrast, (-)-CAMP was a very weak antagonist at both alpha(1)beta(2)gamma(2L) GABA(A) receptors and homooligomeric GABA(C) receptors (IC(50) approximately 900 microM: at rho(1) and approximately 400 microM: at rho(2)). Furthermore, (+)-CAMP appears to be a superior agonist to the widely used GABA(C) receptor partial agonist cis-4-aminocrotonic acid (K:(D) approximately 74 microM: and I:(max) approximately 78% at rho(1); K:(D) approximately 70 microM: and I:(max) approximately 82% at rho(2)). (-)-TAMP was the most potent of the cyclopropane analogues on GABA(C) receptors (K:(D) approximately 9 microM: and I:(max) approximately 40% at rho(1); K:(D) approximately 3 microM: and I:(max) approximately 50-60% at rho(2)), but it was also a moderately potent GABA(A) receptor partial agonist (K:(D) approximately 50-60 microM: and I:(max) approximately 50% at alpha(1)beta(2)gamma(2L) GABA(A) receptors). (+)-TAMP was a less potent partial agonist at GABA(C) receptors (K:(D) approximately 60 microM: and I:(max) approximately 40% at rho(1); K:(D) approximately 30 microM: and I:(max) approximately 60% at rho(2)) and a weak partial agonist at alpha(1)beta(2)gamma(2L) GABA(A) receptors (K:(D) approximately 500 micro: and I:(max) approximately 50%). None of the isomers of (+/-)-CAMP and (+/-)-TAMP displayed any interaction with GABA transport at the concentrations tested. Molecular modeling based on the present results provided new insights into the chiral preferences for either agonism or antagonism at GABA(C) receptors.  相似文献   

15.
An amino acid residue was found in M2 of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) type A receptors that has profound effects on the binding of picrotoxin to the receptor and therefore may form part of its binding pocket. In addition, it strongly affects channel gating. The residue is located N-terminally to residues suggested so far to be important for channel gating. Point mutated alpha1beta(3) receptors were expressed in Xenopus oocytes and analyzed using the electrophysiological techniques. Coexpression of the alpha(1) subunit with the mutated beta(3) subunit beta(3)L253F led to spontaneous picrotoxin-sensitive currents in the absence of GABA. Nanomolar concentrations of GABA further promoted channel opening. Upon washout of picrotoxin, a huge transient inward current was observed. The reversal potential of the inward current was indicative of a chloride ion selectivity. The amplitude of the inward current was strongly dependent on the picrotoxin concentration and on the duration of its application. There was more than a 100-fold decrease in picrotoxin affinity. A kinetic model is presented that mimics the gating behavior of the mutant receptor. The point mutation in the neighboring residue beta(3)A252V resulted in receptors that displayed an about 6-fold increased apparent affinity to GABA and an about 10-fold reduced sensitivity to picrotoxin.  相似文献   

16.
E Sigel  R Baur  G Trube  H M?hler  P Malherbe 《Neuron》1990,5(5):703-711
Different combinations of cloned rat brain subunit isoforms of the GABAA receptor channel were expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The voltage-clamp technique was then used to measure properties of the GABA-induced membrane currents and to study the effects of various modulators of the GABAA receptor channel (diazepam, DMCM, pentobarbital, and picrotoxin). This approach was used to obtain information on the minimal structural requirements for several functional properties of the ion channel. The combination alpha 5 beta 2 gamma 2 was identified as the minimal requirement reproducing consensus properties of the vertebrate GABAA receptor channel, including cooperativity of GABA-dependent channel gating with a Ka in the range of 10 microM, modulation by various drugs acting at the benzodiazepine binding site, picrotoxin sensitivity, and barbiturate effects.  相似文献   

17.
Pseudohypoaldosteronism type 1 (PHA-1) is an inherited disease characterized by severe neonatal salt-wasting and caused by mutations in subunits of the amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC). A missense mutation (G37S) of the human ENaC beta subunit that causes loss of ENaC function and PHA-1 replaces a glycine that is conserved in the N-terminus of all members of the ENaC gene family. We now report an investigation of the mechanism of channel inactivation by this mutation. Homologous mutations, introduced into alpha, beta or gamma subunits, all significantly reduce macroscopic sodium channel currents recorded in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Quantitative determination of the number of channel molecules present at the cell surface showed no significant differences in surface expression of mutant compared with wild-type channels. Single channel conductances and ion selectivities of the mutant channels were identical to that of wild-type. These results suggest that the decrease in macroscopic Na currents is due to a decrease in channel open probability (P(o)), suggesting that mutations of a conserved glycine in the N-terminus of ENaC subunits change ENaC channel gating, which would explain the disease pathophysiology. Single channel recordings of channels containing the mutant alpha subunit (alphaG95S) directly demonstrate a striking reduction in P(o). We propose that this mutation favors a gating mode characterized by short-open and long-closed times. We suggest that determination of the gating mode of ENaC is a key regulator of channel activity.  相似文献   

18.
The majority of fast inhibitory neurotransmission in the CNS is mediated by the GABA type-A (GABAA) receptor, a ligand-gated chloride channel. Of the approximately 20 different subunits composing the hetero-pentameric GABAA receptor, the gamma2 subunit in particular seems to be important in several aspects of GABAA receptor function, including clustering of the receptor at synapses. In this study, we report that the intracellular loop of the gamma2 subunit interacts with itself as well as with gamma1, gamma3 and beta1-3 subunits, but not with the alpha subunits. We further show that gamma2 subunits interact with photolabeled pentameric GABAA receptors composed of alpha1, beta2/3 and gamma2 subunits, and calculate the dissociation constant to be in the micromolar range. By using deletion constructs of the gamma2 subunit in a yeast two-hybrid assay, we identified a 23-amino acid motif that mediates self-association, residues 389-411. We confirmed this interaction motif by inhibiting the interaction in a glutathione-S-transferase pull-down assay by adding a corresponding gamma2-derived peptide. Using similar approaches, we identified the interaction motif in the gamma2 subunit mediating interaction with the beta2 subunit as a 47-amino acid motif that includes the gamma2 self-interacting motif. The identified gamma2 self-association motif is identical to the interaction motif reported between GABAA receptor and GABAA receptor-associated protein (GABARAP). We propose a model for GABAA receptor clustering based on GABARAP and GABAA receptor subunit-subunit interaction.  相似文献   

19.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is a pentameric transmembrane protein (alpha 2 beta gamma delta) that binds the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh) and transduces this binding into the opening of a cation selective channel. The agonist, competitive antagonist, and snake toxin binding functions of the AChR are associated with the alpha subunit (Kao et al., 1984; Tzartos and Changeux, 1984; Wilson et al., 1985; Kao and Karlin, 1986; Pederson et al., 1986). We used site-directed mutagenesis and expression of AChR in Xenopus oocytes to identify amino acid residues critical for ligand binding and channel activation. Several mutations in the alpha subunit sequence were constructed based on information from sequence homology and from previous biochemical (Barkas et al., 1987; Dennis et al., 1988; Middleton and Cohen, 1990) and spectroscopic (Pearce and Hawrot, 1990; Pearce et al., 1990) studies. We have identified one mutation, Tyr190 to Phe (Y190F), that had a dramatic effect on ligand binding and channel activation. These mutant channels required more than 50-fold higher concentrations of ACh for channel activation than did wild type channels. This functional change is largely accounted for by a comparable shift in the agonist binding affinity, as assessed by the ability of ACh to compete with alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Other mutations at nearby conserved positions of the alpha subunit (H186F, P194S, Y198F) produce less dramatic changes in channel properties. Our results demonstrate that ligand binding and channel gating are separable properties of the receptor protein, and that Tyr190 appears to play a specific role in the receptor site for acetylcholine.  相似文献   

20.
General anesthetics allosterically modulate the activity of neuronal gamma-aminobutyric acid, type A (GABAA), receptors. Previous mutational studies from our laboratory and others have shown that the regions in transmembrane domain 1 (M1) and pre-M1 of alpha and beta subunits in GABA receptors are essential for positive modulation of GABA binding and function by the intravenous (IV) general anesthetics. Mutation of beta2Gly-219 to Phe corresponded in rho nearly eliminated the modulatory effect of IV anesthetics in alpha1/beta2/gamma2S combination. However, the general anesthetics retained the ability to directly open the channel of mutant G219F, and the apparent affinity for GABA was increased, and desensitization rate was reduced. In this study, we made additional single mutations such as 219 Ser, Cys, Ile, Asp, Arg, Tyr, and Trp. The larger side chains of the replacement residues produced the greatest reduction in enhancement of GABA currents by IV anesthetics at clinical concentrations (Trp > Tyr = Phe > Arg > Asp > Ile > Cys > Ser = wild type). Compared with a 2-3-fold response in wild type, pentobarbital and propofol enhanced less than 0.5-fold; etomidate and alphaxalone modulation was reduced from more than 4- to 1-fold in G219F, G219Y, and G219W. A linear correlation was observed between the volume of the residue at position 219 and the loss of modulation. An identical correlation was found for the effect of modulation on left-shift in the GABA EC50 value; furthermore, the same rank order of residues, related to size, was found for reduction in the maximal direct channel-gating by pentobarbital (1 mm) and etomidate (100 mum) and for increased apparent affinity for direct gating by the IV anesthetics.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号