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1.
Analysis of the binding of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) by Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) has demonstrated that a region of the alpha-subunit between alpha-156 and alpha-179 is exposed on the cytoplasmic surface of the nicotinic post-synaptic membrane. A panel of mAbs was produced that recognized sodium dodecyl sulfate-denatured subunits of the Torpedo AChR. Antibodies recognizing alpha-subunit were distinguished in terms of their ability to bind alpha-subunit fragments generated by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease: an 18-kDa fragment beginning at Val-46, a 20-kDa fragment beginning at Ser-173/Ser-162, and a 10 kDa fragment beginning at Asn-339. Three mAbs, selected for binding to each of the V8-protease alpha-subunit fragments, respectively, were characterized in detail. The location of epitopes recognized by both anti-V8-18 and anti-V8-20 mAbs was determined to be within alpha-156 to alpha-179 by isolation of small immunoreactive peptides from proteolytic digests of the alpha-subunit, while the mAb reactive to V8-10 was bound to an epitope within alpha-339 to alpha-386. Quantitative evaluation of binding of the anti-V8-18 and anti-V8-20 mAbs to overlapping synthetic peptides corresponding to alpha-147 to alpha-179 localized the epitopes to distinct portions of this region. Further screening of the panel of mAbs using these synthetic peptides revealed three additional mAbs that bind in this region. The mAbs that bound the three distinct V8-protease alpha-subunit fragments were shown to bind to native AChR by indirect immunofluorescence on frozen sections of Torpedo electric organ. Binding to the native AChR was to the cytoplasmic surface of the AChR since the mAbs could bind to AChR in native vesicles, in which the AChR is oriented right-side-out, only after permeabilization of the vesicles by alkaline treatment or after scrambling of the orientation of the AChR by solubilization and reconstitution into liposomes. The location of the mAb-binding sites at the cytoplasmic surface of the AChR was visualized directly by freeze-etch immunoelectron microscopy. The identification of alpha-156 and alpha-179 as containing a cytoplasmic exposed sequence implies the existence of two non-hydrophobic transmembrane sequences between the site of N-glycosylation (Asn-141) and Cys-192, a site alkylated by the cholinergic affinity labels.  相似文献   

2.
A region of the alpha-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of the Torpedo electric organ, containing residues 161-166, has been proposed to be a major antigenic site in the native AChR protein. We report the synthesis of a peptide corresponding to residues 159-169, which contains the proposed antigenic region. In quantitative radiometric titrations, radiolabelled anti-(native AChR) antibodies from three different species, rabbit, rat and dog, exhibited considerable binding (approx. 15% relative to native AChR) to Sepharose-immobilized peptide 159-169, but did not bind significantly to Sepharose-immobilized unrelated proteins or peptides. Specificity was further confirmed by the finding that no rabbit anti-AChR antibodies bound to the peptide after absorption with native AChR. These data indicate that the region 159-169 contains an antigenic site that is readily accessible in solubilized native Torpedo AChR.  相似文献   

3.
The immunological structure of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) from the electric organ of Torpedo californica was studied using a large number of monoclonal antibodies which were initially selected for their abilities to bind to intact AChRs. The monoclonal antibodies were tested for their ability to bind to denatured AChR subunits labeled with 125I. Antibodies derived from rats immunized with individual denatured subunits or a mixture of subunits of Torpedo AChR reacted well in the assay. A much smaller proportion of antibodies derived from rats immunized with native Torpedo AChR or native AChR from Electrophorus electricus electric organ, bovine muscle, or human muscle reacted with denatured subunits of Torpedo AChR. Many monoclonal antibodies reacted with more than one subunit, but they always reacted best with the subunit used for immunization. Those monoclonal antibodies that bound to intact subunits were mapped more precisely by their ability to bind characteristic fragments of each subunit generated by proteolysis with Staphylococcal V8 protease. These fragments were analyzed by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and monoclonal antibodies that precipitated the same fragment pattern were placed in groups. By this method, we define a minimum of 28 determinants on Torpedo AChR.  相似文献   

4.
We have used Southern blot hybridization to analyze the genomic structure encoding the alpha-subunit of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in Torpedo marmorata, with cDNA probes isolated from the electric organ. Four different radiolabelled probes, corresponding to various parts of the alpha-subunit mRNA, hybridized to several genomic fragments of T. marmorata DNA generated by digestion with the restriction enzymes SstI, PvuII and PstI. The same hybridization pattern was observed after washing the blots under low- or high-stringency conditions. As a check for detection sensitivity of heterologous sequences, the same probes were hybridized to PvuII-digested chicken DNA, revealing bands at low stringency which disappeared at higher stringencies. Unambiguously, two of our probes (one of them entirely within the coding region) hybridized to a single genomic fragment from T. marmorata DNA. This feature, as well as the results of an extensive study of the whole hybridization pattern, points towards the uniqueness of alpha-subunit-specific sequences in the genome of T. marmorata. Since overall more bands were found than expected from the cDNA sequence, this alpha-subunit gene must be split by several introns (at least four, possibly more). The length of this gene is at least 20 kb. The existence of a single alpha-subunit gene is consistent with the absence of chemical heterogeneity in the NH2-terminal sequence of the purified alpha-chain, and supports the view that the two alpha-chains belonging to one AChR oligomer have an identical primary structure. It also suggests that localization and stabilization of the AChR in well-defined post-synaptic areas of T. marmorata electric organ basically relies, during development, on 'epigenetic' mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Analysis of acetylcholine receptor clones isolated from a human leg muscle cDNA library, revealed that the alpha-subunit existed as two isoforms. A novel exon, coding for 25 amino acids, was located in the human genomic DNA sequence; its insertion into the alpha-subunit gives the new isoform of 462 amino acids. In addition, mRNAs for the two isoforms were found in equal proportions in poly(A)+ RNA obtained from three further sources including partially denervated and innervated human muscle and the rhabdomyosarcoma cell line TE671. Both protein isoforms can be expressed in E. coli. No evidence of a sequence related to that of the new exon was found in cDNA derived from poly(A)+ RNA isolated from fetal calf or embryonic chick muscle or Torpedo marmorata electric organ.  相似文献   

7.
A region of 25 nucleotides is highly conserved in genes coding for the alpha, beta, gamma, and delta subunits of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of human, mouse, calf, chicken, and Torpedo. Based on this observation, a 2-fold degenerate oligonucleotide was synthesized and used as a probe to screen a cDNA library made from a mouse myogenic cell line. Clones coding for the beta, gamma, and delta subunits were identified by the probe. The protein sequence deduced from the beta subunit clones codes for a precursor polypeptide of 501 amino acids with a calculated molecular weight of 56,930 daltons, which includes a signal peptide of 23 amino acids. The protein sequence and structural features of the beta subunits of mouse, calf, and Torpedo are conserved. A clone coding for the mouse gamma subunit was isolated, and its identity was confirmed by alignment of its sequence to previously published cDNA sequences for the mouse and calf gamma subunits. The clone contained approximately 200 nucleotides more at its 3' end untranslated region than a mouse gamma clone recently described. Northern blot analysis, utilizing as probes these beta and gamma subunit cDNAs and previously characterized alpha and delta subunit cDNAs, shows that the steady-state levels of the four AChR mRNAs increase coordinately during terminal differentiation of cultured C2 and C2i mouse myoblasts. The increase in mRNA levels can account for the rise of cell surface receptors during myogenesis and suggests that the muscle AChR genes may be regulated during development by a common mechanism. Utilization of this oligonucleotide probe should prove useful for screening a variety of libraries made from different species and tissues which are known to express AChRs.  相似文献   

8.
Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) purified from human skeletal muscle affinity-alkylated with bromoacetyl[methyl-3H]choline bromide ([3H]BAC) in mildly reducing conditions to yield a specifically radiolabeled polypeptide, Mr 44,000, the alpha-subunit. The binding of [125I]alpha-bungarotoxin to AChR was completely inhibited by affinity-alkylation, indicating that the human AChR's binding site for alpha-bungarotoxin is closely associated with the alpha-subunit's acetylcholine binding site. Structures in the vicinity of the alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites of AChRs from human muscle and Torpedo electric organ were compared by varying the conditions of alkylation. Under optimal conditions of reduction and alkylation, both human and Torpedo AChR incorporated BAC in equivalence to the number of alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites. However, with limited conditions of reduction but sufficient BAC to alkylate 100% of the alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites of human AChR, only 71% of the Torpedo AChR's binding sites were alkylated. In optimal conditions of reduction but with the minimal concentration of BAC that permitted 100% alkylation of the human AChR's alpha-bungarotoxin sites, only 74% of the Torpedo AChR's binding sites were alkylated. These data suggest that the neurotransmitter binding region of human muscle AChR is structurally dissimilar from that of Torpedo electric organ, having a higher binding affinity for BAC and an adjacent disulfide bond that is more readily accessible to reducing agents.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Yeast expression vectors were constructed containing complementary DNA encoding the alpha-, beta-, gamma-, and delta-subunits of the Torpedo californica nicotinic acetylcholine receptor under the control of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae alcohol dehydrogenase promoter. All four plasmids were integrated into the yeast genome of a single yeast cell. The resulting yeast strain synthesized polypeptides novel to yeast that had the molecular weights and antigenic properties similar to the authentic T. californica receptor alpha-, gamma, and delta-subunits. The beta-subunit polypeptide could not be detected in this yeast strain, even though the poly(A)+ RNA from this strain contained all the information necessary for the expression of functional acetylcholine receptors in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The replacement of the beta-subunit mRNA 5'-untranslated leader and its N-terminal signal sequence by the corresponding alpha-subunit sequences, however, resulted in the expression of the beta-subunit polypeptide in yeast grown at 5 degrees C.  相似文献   

11.
We report the isolation and sequence of a cDNA clone that encodes a locust (Schistocerca gregaria) nervous system nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunit (alpha L1). The calculated molecular weight of the unglycosylated polypeptide, which contains in the proposed extracellular domain two adjacent cysteine residues which are characteristic of alpha (ligand binding) subunits, is 60,641 daltons. Injection into Xenopus oocytes, of RNA synthesized from this clone in vitro, results in expression of functional nicotinic receptors in the oocyte membrane. In these, nicotine opens a cation channel; the receptors are blocked by both alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-Bgt) and kappa-bungarotoxin (kappa-Bgt). Reversible block of the expressed insect AChR by mecamylamine, d-tubocurarine, tetraethylammonium, bicuculline and strychnine has also been observed. These data are entirely consistent with previously reported electrophysiological studies on in vivo insect nicotinic receptors and also with biochemical studies on an alpha-Bgt affinity purified locust AChR. Thus, a functional receptor exhibiting the characteristic pharmacology of an in vivo insect nicotinic AChR can be expressed in Xenopus oocytes by injection with a single subunit RNA.  相似文献   

12.
The target of most of the autoantibodies against the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in myasthenic sera is the main immunogenic region (MIR) on the extracellular side of the AChR alpha-subunit. Binding of anti-MIR monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) has been recently localized between residues alpha 67 and alpha 76 of Torpedo californica electric organ (WNPADYGGIK) and human muscle (WNPDDYGGVK) AChR. In order to evaluate the contribution of each residue to the antigenicity of the MIR, we synthesized peptides corresponding to residues alpha 67-76 from Torpedo and human AChRs, together with 13 peptide analogues. Nine of these analogues had one residue of the Torpedo decapeptide replaced by L-alanine, three had a structure which was intermediate between those of the Torpedo and human alpha 67-76 decapeptides, and one had D-alanine in position 73. Binding studies employing six anti-MIR mAbs and all 15 peptides revealed that some residues (Asn68 and Asp71) are indispensable for binding by all mAbs tested, whereas others are important only for binding by some mAbs. Antibody binding was mainly restricted to residues alpha 68-74, the most critical sequence being alpha 68-71. Fish electric organ and human MIR form two distinct groups of strongly overlapping epitopes. Some peptide analogues enhanced mAb binding compared with Torpedo and human peptides, suggesting that the construction of a very antigenic MIR is feasible.  相似文献   

13.
B H White  J B Cohen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(24):8741-8751
The hydrophobic, photoactivatable probe 3-trifluoromethyl-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine ([125I]TID) was used to label acetylcholine receptor rich membranes purified from Torpedo californica electric organ. All four subunits of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) were found to incorporate label, with the gamma-subunit incorporating approximately 4 times as much as each of the other subunits. Carbamylcholine, an agonist, and histrionicotoxin, a noncompetitive antagonist, both strongly inhibited labeling of all AChR subunits in a specific and dose-dependent manner. In contrast, the competitive antagonist alpha-bungarotoxin and the noncompetitive antagonist phencyclidine had only modest effects on [125I]TID labeling of the AChR. The regions of the AChR alpha-subunit that incorporate [125I]TID were mapped by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. The carbamylcholine-sensitive site of labeling was localized to a 20-kDa V8 cleavage fragment that begins at Ser-173 and is of sufficient length to contain the three hydrophobic regions M1, M2, and M3. A 10-kDa fragment beginning at Asn-339 and containing the hydrophobic region M4 also incorporated [125I]TID but in a carbamylcholine-insensitive manner. Two further cleavage fragments, which together span about one-third of the alpha-subunit amino terminus, incorporated no detectable [125I]TID. The mapping results place constraints on suggested models of AChR subunit topology.  相似文献   

14.
Immunohistochemical studies have previously shown that both the chick brain and chick ciliary ganglion neurons contain a component which shares antigenic determinants with the main immunogenic region of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from electric organ and skeletal muscle. Here we describe the purification and initial characterization of this putative neuronal acetylcholine receptor. The component was purified by monoclonal antibody affinity chromatography. The solubilized component sediments on sucrose gradients as a species slightly larger than Torpedo acetylcholine receptor monomers. It was affinity labeled with bromo[3H]acetylcholine. Labeling was prevented by carbachol, but not by alpha-bungarotoxin. Two subunits could be detected in the affinity-purified component, apparent molecular weights 48 000 and 59 000. The 48 000 molecular weight subunit was bound both by a monoclonal antibody directed against the main immunogenic region of electric organ and skeletal muscle acetylcholine receptor and by antisera raised against the alpha subunit of Torpedo receptor. Evidence suggests that there are two alpha subunits in the brain component. Antisera from rats immunized with the purified brain component exhibited little or no cross-reactivity with Torpedo electric organ or chick muscle acetylcholine receptor. One antiserum did, however, specifically bind to all four subunits of Torpedo receptor. Experiments to be described elsewhere (J. Stollberg et al., unpublished results) show that antisera to the purified brain component specifically inhibit the electrophysiological function of acetylcholine receptors in chick ciliary ganglion neurons without inhibiting the function of acetylcholine receptors in chick muscle cells. All of these properties suggest that this component is a neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor with limited structural homology to muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.  相似文献   

15.
J Lindstrom  B Walter  B Einarson 《Biochemistry》1979,18(21):4470-4480
Polypeptide chains composing acetylcholine receptors from the electric organs of Torpedo californica and Electrophorus electricus were purified and labeled with 125I. Immunochemical studies with these labeled chains showed that receptor from Electrophorus is composed of three chains corresponding to the alpha, beta, and gamma chains of receptor from Torpedo but lacks a chain corresponding to the delta chain of Torpedo. Experiments suggest that receptor from mammalian muscle contains four groups of antigenic determinants corresponding to all four of the Torpedo chains. Binding of 125I-labeled chains was measured by quantitative immune precipitation and electrophoresis. Antisera to the following immunogens were used: denatured alpha, beta, gamma, and delta chains of Torpedo receptor, native receptor from Torpedo and Electrophorus electric organs and from rat and fetal calf muscle, and human muscle receptor (from autoantisera of patients with myasthenia gravis). The four chains of Torpedo receptor were immunologically distinct from one another and from higher molecular weight chains found in electric organ membranes. Antibodies to these chains reacted very efficiently with native Torpedo receptor, but the reverse was not true. Antibodies to native receptor from Torpedo and Electrophorus reacted slightly with each of the chains of the corresponding receptor. However, cross-reaction between chains and antibodies to any native receptor was most obviuos with the alpha chain of Torpedo or the corresponding alpha' chain of Electrophorus. Antiserum to alpha chains exhibited higher titer aginst receptor from denervated rat muscle. Antibodies from myasthenia gravis patients did not cross-react detectably with 125I-labeled chains from electric organ receptors. Most interspecies cross-reaction occurred at conformationally dependent determinants whose subunit localization could not be determined by reaction with the denatured chains.  相似文献   

16.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):2471-2478
Extracts of the electric organ of Torpedo californica contain a proteinaceous factor that causes the formation of patches on cultured myotubes at which acetylcholine receptors (AChR), acetylcholinesterase (AChE), and butyrylcholinesterase (BuChE) are concentrated. Results of previous experiments indicate that this factor is similar to the molecules in the synaptic basal lamina that direct the aggregation of AChR and AChE at regenerating neuromuscular junctions in vivo. We have purified the active components in the extracts 9,000-fold. mAbs against four different epitopes on the AChR/AChE/BuChE-aggregating molecules each immunoprecipitated four polypeptides from electric organ extracts, with molecular masses of 150, 135, 95, and 70 kD. Gel filtration chromatography of electric organ extracts revealed two peaks of AChR/AChE/BuChE-aggregation activity; one comigrated with the 150-kD polypeptide, the other with the 95-kD polypeptide. The 135- and 70-kD polypeptides did not cause AChR/AChE/BuChE aggregation. Based on these molecular characteristics and on the pattern of staining seen in sections of muscle labeled with the mAbs, we conclude that the electric organ-aggregating factor is distinct from previously identified molecules, and we have named it "agrin."  相似文献   

17.
M K Das  J Lindstrom 《Biochemistry》1991,30(9):2470-2477
Concurrent synthesis of overlapping octameric peptides corresponding to the sequence of the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha subunit has been carried out on polypropylene supports functionalized with primary amino groups according to a method developed by M. Geysen [(1987) J. Immunol. Methods 102, 259-274]. The peptides on the solid supports have been used in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Interactions of the synthetic peptides with antibodies are then detected without removing them from the solid support. By this procedure, epitopes of both antisera and monoclonal antibodies to the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor, its subunits, and synthetic peptide fragments have been mapped. Both rat and rabbit antisera to the alpha subunit show major epitopes spanning the residues 150-165, 338-345, and 355-366 on the Torpedo AChR alpha subunit. Epitopes of monoclonal antibodies to these major epitopes and to others have been rather precisely mapped by using this technique with peptides of varying lengths. The specificity of several of these mAbs are of interest because they have been used in mapping the transmembrane orientation of the AChR alpha-subunit polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Two high-affinity mAbs were prepared against Torpedo dystrophin, an electric organ protein that is closely similar to human dystrophin, the gene product of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy locus. The antibodies were used to localize dystrophin relative to acetylcholine receptors (AChR) in electric organ and in skeletal muscle, and to show identity between Torpedo dystrophin and the previously described 270/300-kD Torpedo postsynaptic protein. Dystrophin was found in both AChR-rich and AChR-poor regions of the innervated face of the electroplaque. Immunogold experiments showed that AChR and dystrophin were closely intermingled in the AChR domains. In contrast, dystrophin appeared to be absent from many or all AChR-rich domains of the rat neuromuscular junction and of AChR clusters in cultured muscle (Xenopus laevis). It was present, however, in the immediately surrounding membrane (deep regions of the junctional folds, membrane domains interdigitating with and surrounding AChR domains within clusters). These results suggest that dystrophin may have a role in organization of AChR in electric tissue. Dystrophin is not, however, an obligatory component of AChR domains in muscle and, at the neuromuscular junction, its roles may be more related to organization of the junctional folds.  相似文献   

20.
We have constructed a cDNA library from Torpedo marmorata electric organ poly(A+) RNA in the lambda phage expression vector lambda gt11. This library has been screened with polyclonal anti-acetylcholinesterase antibodies. One clone, lambda AChE1, produced a fusion protein which was recognized by the antibodies and which prevented the binding of native acetylcholinesterase in an enzymatic immune assay. These results indicate that lambda AChE1 contains a cDNA insert coding for a part of a catalytic subunit of Torpedo acetylcholinesterase. The 200-base-pair cDNA insert hybridized to three mRNAs (14.5, 10.5 and 5.5 kb) from Torpedo electric organs. These mRNAs were also detected in Torpedo electric lobes.  相似文献   

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