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 9 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
The sensitivity of acetylcholine receptor to eleven cholinergic drugs, phospholipase A, heat and pH provided evidence that the so-called high-affinity binding (Kd for acetylcholine 11 nm in 1% Triton) and low-affinity binding (Kd 562 nm) were related to two distinct binding sites. The low-affinity binding site was less sensitive to heat and several of the cholinergic drugs, but was a little more sensitive to bungarotoxin than the high-affinity site. Zinc (0.4 mm) and EDTA (10 mm) abolished acetylcholine binding to both sites; the EDTA inhibition was time-dependent.  相似文献   

3.
The muscle-type nicotinic receptor has two pharmacologically distinguishable acetylcholine binding sites at the alpha-gamma and alpha-delta subunit interfaces; alpha-conotoxins can bind them selectively. As reported, alpha-conotoxin MI has greater affinity for the site near the alpha-delta interface of the BC(3)H1 cell receptor but, in the case of the Torpedo californica receptor, displays greater affinity for that near the alpha-gamma interface. To further investigate ligand selectivity, we study the conotoxin MI-Torpedo marmorata receptor interaction. In this work, we show the binding of alpha-conotoxin MI to the T. marmorata receptor and the influence of the antagonist alpha-Bungarotoxin and the agonist carbamylcholine on such binding; in addition, and contrasting with the results for the Torpedo californica receptor, we identify the alpha-delta subunit interface as the high affinity binding site. This is the first work describing different characteristics of the interaction between alpha-conotoxin MI and receptors from different species of the same genus.  相似文献   

4.
H Prinz  A Maelicke 《Biochemistry》1992,31(29):6728-6738
We have studied by means of equilibrium binding and kinetic experiments the interaction of the membrane-bound nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nACHR) from Torpedo marmorata with [3H]acetylcholine and the fluorescent agonist NBD-5-acylcholine. In agreement with previous studies by others, we observed the preexistence, in the absence of ligand, of an equilibrium between two states of the nAChR, one with high affinity and the other with low affinity for agonist. As additional requirements for a minimal reaction scheme, we recognized (i) the existence of two ligand-binding sites, each of which may exist in two conformational states when occupied, and (ii) ligand-induced transitions between these conformations. Employing a special form of the allosteric model which considers these requirements, we then developed a suitable algorithm in order to simultaneously fit the whole set of equilibrium binding and kinetic data obtained for the two ligands. In this way we determined for a minimal model of the mechanism of action of the nAChR the complete set of rate constants and KD values involved. With these values available, we were able to simulate the rise and fall in the concentrations of individual receptor-ligand complexes and conformations occurring in the course of excitatory events at the electrocyte synapse. The membrane environment of the nAChR plays a decisive role with respect to the rates of conformational change of the nAChR occurring in the course of ligand interaction. Thus, artificial changes in membrane structure and composition can speed up by several orders of magnitude the rate of conformational change ("desensitization"). A proper structure of the surrounding membrane hence is a prerequisite for the physiological function of the membrane-embedded nAChR.  相似文献   

5.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) immunoaffinity-purified from brains are composed of only two kinds of subunits rather than the four kinds present in muscle-type AChRs. Here we report the N-terminal protein sequences of the structural subunits of AChRs from rat and chicken brains and the cloning of full-length cDNAs for the chicken brain AChR structural subunit. Previously, the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the ACh-binding subunit of AChR immunoaffinity-purified from rat brain was shown to correspond to the cDNA alpha 4. Thus, cDNA sequences are now known for both of the subunits that form one AChR subtype in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
S Wonnacott  R Harrison  G G Lunt 《Life sciences》1980,27(19):1769-1775
The relationship of the carbohydrate components of purified acetylcholine receptor (AChR) to its acetylcholine binding site was investigated by two approaches. In the first, the effect of periodate or glycosidase treatment of AChR on its ability to bind α-bungarotoxin was assessed. Although loss of binding capacity was observed, this could be attributed to increased temperature, acid pH or high salt concentrations of the incubation conditions rather than to the specific action of periodate or glycosidases, indicating that the α-toxin binding site does not directly involve carbohydrate.The second approach involved the use of concanavalin A to block the binding of α-toxin to AChR, when a maximum inhibition of approximately 40% was obtained. The results are interpreted in terms of heterogeneity of AChR molecules, of which some 40% have sterically interacting sites binding concanavalin A and α-toxin respectively.  相似文献   

7.
The purified acetylcholine receptor of Torpedo marmorata has been characterized by sedimentation velocity measurements on dilute solutions using an ultracentrifuge and scanner. Several preparations were studied and all exhibited sedimentation coefficients in the vicinity of 24S. In a number of experiments the receptor could be resolved into two sedimenting boundaries of 18S and 26S, corresponding to minimum molecular weights of about 5 × 105 and 106, respectively. Additions of sodium dodecyl sulfate or Triton X-100 resulted in marked decreases in sedimentation coefficient, while treatment with Lubrol-WX had only a slight effect on the S values. Small changes in S20,w were produced by guanidine hydrochloride alone, although addition of dithiothreitol with 6 M guanidine hydrochloride resulted in an 8.8S component. Electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate gave one principal band with a molecular weight of 46,000.  相似文献   

8.
9.
R E Oswald 《Life sciences》1983,32(10):1143-1149
The binding of phencyclidine to the acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo marmorata electroplaque was measured following solubilization of the receptor in sodium cholate followed by the exchange of cholate for Tween 80. In both the membrane-bound and solubilized AChR, the addition of cholinergic agonists simultaneously with the addition of PCP results in a 100 to 1000 fold increase in the PCP association rate and a 5 to 10 fold increase in the dissociation rate as compared to the unliganded AChR or AChR equilibrated with agonist prior to PCP addition. In addition, the number of binding sites and the pharmacological properties of the binding are not markedly changed in the soluble receptor. These results suggest that the acetylcholine receptor can undergo similar conformational transitions in the membrane-bound and the Tween 80 solubilized form and that phencyclidine can monitor these transitions in both cases.  相似文献   

10.
The structure of the heavy (H) form of the acetylcholine receptor, which comprises two covalently linked 250,000 Mr oligomers, has been investigated by numerical analysis of electron microscope images. Na-cholate solubilized Torpedo marmorata H-form receptor was reintegrated into artificial lipid vesicles and negatively stained with uranyl acetate prior to imaging in a conventional transmission microscope. The reconstituted preparations exhibited the standard polypeptide composition of the purified receptor (α2βγδ) and the same transmembrane arrangement as in the native subsynaptic membrane. Covalent disulfide linkage between the two oligomers took place exclusively through the δ chains.In agreement with previous work (Cartaud et al., 1980) the H-form appeared as “doublets” of two coplanar 9 nm rosettes at a center-to-center distance of 9.2 ± 1.1 nm. The relative angular orientation of the two rosettes in a doublet was examined by correlation analysis in the real space. It exhibited a marked variability, few of the doublets featuring any kind of symmetry, suggesting that the two oligomers of a doublet are connected via an extended and flexible chain or loop. The area of contact between the two rosettes of a doublet therefore does not necessarily represent a reliable clue as to the location of the δ chain within the structure.Averaged images obtained after reorientation and summation of up to 132 rosettes revealed the three major peaks and the two grooves already observed in previous studies. Two additional smaller peaks were identified.Tentative assignment of structural details to individual subunits was deduced from an examination of α-bungarotoxin-labeled doublets. The α subunits, which carry part or all of the acetylcholine binding sites, are probably located in nonadjacent positions in the vicinity of the newly found peaks. This assignment is consistent with the image analysis of receptor-toxin complexes recently reported by Zingsheim et al. (1982b).  相似文献   

11.
12.
A preparation of purified 125I-labelled acetylcholine receptor was shown to bind to concanavalin A and to be totally bound by rabbit antiserum to Torpedo acetylcholine receptor. Pre-incubation of the receptor with F(ab')2 and Fab fragments from antibodies against Torpedo acetylcholine receptor, or with corresponding fragments from control immunoglobulin G showed that subsequent binding of the receptor to concanavalin A was specifically inhibited to a maximum of approximately 25% by the immune fragments. Treatment of acetylcholine receptor with periodate or with glycosidases apparently destroyed or removed carbohydrate residues without affecting the antigenicity of the receptor as assessed by radioimmunoassay. These results suggest that although there is a steric interrelatonship between the antigenic and concanavalin-A-binding sites of the receptor the latter sites do not contain its major antigenic determinants.  相似文献   

13.
A cDNA clone of an alpha subunit of the human GABA-A receptor has been isolated. The human clone (pCLL800) contains 1055 nucleotides in an open reading frame and 260 nucleotides in the 5' non-coding region. The 351 amino acid sequence of this human alpha subunit shows 97% homology with its bovine counterpart. Hybridization of pCLL800 to Northern blots shows a 3.9/4.3 Kb RNA doublet in human cortex, rat whole brain, cortex, hippocampus, midbrain, olfactory bulb and cerebellum. Developmental studies show that the levels of the rat alpha mRNA increase between one and three weeks of age in a manner similar to the development of the benzodiazepine binding sites.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Excitable acetylcholine receptor rich membrane fragments from Torpedo marmorata have been used to measure, in parallel, (1) the permeability response to the fluorescent cholinergic agonist Dns-C6-Cho (in the 0.1 microM to millimolar concentration range) characterized by both the initial rate of Li+ transport and the rate of channel closure using the rapid-mixing quench-flow technique and (2) the kinetics of interaction of Dns-C6-Cho with the acetylcholine receptor sites using the rapid-mixing stopped-flow technique. Analysis of the kinetics of Dns-C6-Cho binding in the millisecond to minute time scale leads to the identification of at least three conformational states of the acetylcholine receptor: a "low-affinity" one (approximately 50 microM) that can be interconverted in the fraction of a second to a transient state of "intermediate affinity" (approximately 1 microM), followed by the final stabilization, in the second to minute time range, of a state of "high affinity" (approximately 3 nM). Comparison of Dns-C6-Cho binding data with the permeability response to the same agonist demonstrates that the binding to the low-affinity conformation(s) of the acetylcholine receptor sites coincides with the triggering of the permeability increase--or "activation"--and the transitions to the intermediate- and high-affinity states with the two-step process of channel closing--or "desensitization". The data are interpreted in terms of a minimum four-state "allosteric" model for the acetylcholine receptor.  相似文献   

16.
M C Souroujon  S Carmon  A Safran  S Fuchs 《FEBS letters》1991,288(1-2):222-226
Antibodies to a synthetic peptide corresponding to residues 346-359 of the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor (AChR) gamma subunit, were employed to compare the adult and embryonic receptor. This peptide contains a consensus phosphorylation site for cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA). The anti-peptide antibodies discriminated between adult and embryonic AChRs, and reacted preferentially with the adult gamma form. These observed immunological differences did not seem to stem from different phosphorylation states. Our results suggest that the embryonic Torpedo AChR may have a gamma-like subunit that differs from the known adult form of this subunit, at least in the specific region that contains the phosphorylation site for PKA.  相似文献   

17.
Recently the purified alpha-subunit from Torpedo marmorata acetylcholine receptor was shown to bind alpha-bungarotoxin with a KD approximately 3 nM in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (Tzartos, S.J., and Changeux, J.P. (1983) EMBO J. 2, 381-387). Here we describe a further significant step toward renaturation of the alpha-subunit as judged by toxin and monoclonal antibody binding. Purified T. marmorata receptor subunits were diluted with 1% lipids (asolectin) plus 0.5% Na+ cholate. An anion-exchange resin eliminated most of the detergents, leaving approximately 0.1% Na+ cholate and the lipids. After this treatment, about 20% of the alpha-subunit recovered (but not the beta-, gamma-, or delta-subunit) exhibited a high affinity for radioiodinated alpha-bungarotoxin with a KD approximately 0.5 nM. The 34,000- and 27,000-dalton proteolytic peptides of the alpha-subunit conserved this lipid-dependent toxin binding. Unlabeled alpha-toxins, hexamethonium, and carbamylcholine competed with alpha-bungarotoxin for the renatured alpha-subunit. Noncompetitive channel blockers doubled the lipid-dependent toxin-binding capacity of the alpha-subunit but had no effect on the 27,000-dalton peptide. The binding of several monoclonal antibodies to the main immunogenic region (which is particularly sensitive to denaturation) significantly increased. In particular, binding of antibody 16 changed from 1% to denatured to 100% to the lipid-renaturated alpha-subunit. The binding of these antibodies was lost with the lipid-renatured 34,000- and 27,000-dalton peptides.  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
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   

20.
Song XZ  Andreeva IE  Pedersen SE 《Biochemistry》2003,42(14):4197-4207
Fluorescent energy transfer measurements of dansyl-C6-choline binding to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) from Torpedo californica were used to determine binding characteristics of the alpha gamma and alpha delta binding sites. Equilibrium binding measurements show that the alpha gamma site has a lower fluorescence than the alpha delta site; the emission difference is due to differences in the intrinsic fluorescence of the bound fluorophores rather than differences in energy transfer at the two sites. Stopped-flow fluorescence kinetics showed that dissociation of dansyl-C6-choline from the AChR in the desensitized conformation occurs 5-10-fold faster from the alpha gamma site than from the alpha delta site. The dissociation rates are robust for distinct protein preparations, in the presence of noncompetitive antagonists, and over a broad range of ionic strengths. Equilibrium fluorescent binding measurements show that dansyl-C6-choline binds with higher affinity to the alpha delta site (K = 3 nM) than to the alpha gamma site (K = 9 nM) when the AChR is desensitized. Similar affinity differences were observed for acetylcholine itself. The distinct dissociation rates permit the extent of desensitization to be measured at each site during the time course of binding. This sequential mixing method of measuring the desensitized state population at each agonist site can be applied to study the mechanism of AChR activation and subsequent desensitization in detail.  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