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1.
T L Lentz  E Hawrot  P T Wilson 《Proteins》1987,2(4):298-307
Peptides corresponding to portions of loop 2 of snake venom curare-mimetic neurotoxins and to a structurally similar region of rabies virus glycoprotein were synthesized. Interaction of these peptides with purified Torpedo electric organ acetylcholine receptor was tested by measuring their ability to block the binding of 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin to the receptor. In addition, inhibition of alpha-bungarotoxin binding to a 32-residue synthetic peptide corresponding to positions 173-204 of the alpha-subunit was determined. Neurotoxin and glycoprotein peptides corresponding to toxin loop 2 inhibited labeled toxin binding to the receptor with IC50 values comparable to those of nicotine and the competitive antagonist d-tubocurarine and to the alpha-subunit peptides with apparent affinities between those of d-tubocurarine and alpha-cobratoxin. Substitution of neurotoxin residue Arg37, the proposed counterpart of the quaternary ammonium of acetylcholine, with a negatively charged Glu residue reduced the apparent affinity about 10-fold. Peptides containing the neurotoxin invariant residue Trp29 and 10- to 100-fold higher affinities than peptides lacking this residue. These results demonstrate that relatively short synthetic peptides retain some of the binding ability of the native protein from which they are derived, indicating that such peptides are useful in the study of protein-protein interactions. The ability of the peptides to compete alpha-bungarotoxin binding to the receptor with apparent affinities comparable to those of other cholinergic ligands indicates that loop 2 of the neurotoxins and the structurally similar segment of the rabies virus glycoprotein act as recognition sites for the acetylcholine receptor. Invariant toxin residues Arg37 and Trp29 and their viral homologs play important, although not essential, roles in binding, possibly by interaction with complementary anionic and hydrophobic subsites on the acetylcholine receptor. The alpha-subunit peptide most likely contains all of the determinants for binding of the toxin and glycoprotein peptides present on the alpha-subunit, because these peptides bind to the 32-residue alpha-subunit peptide with the same or greater affinity as to the intact subunit.  相似文献   

2.
We report a new, higher resolution NMR structure of alpha-bungarotoxin that defines the structure-determining disulfide core and beta-sheet regions. We further report the NMR structure of the stoichiometric complex formed between alpha-bungarotoxin and a recombinantly expressed 19-mer peptide ((178)IPGKRTESFYECCKEPYPD(196)) derived from the alpha7 subunit of the chick neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. A comparison of these two structures reveals binding-induced stabilization of the flexible tip of finger II in alpha-bungarotoxin. The conformational rearrangements in the toxin create an extensive binding surface involving both sides of the alpha7 19-mer hairpin-like structure. At the contact zone, Ala(7), Ser(9), and Ile(11) in finger I and Arg(36), Lys(38), Val(39), and Val(40) in finger II of alpha-bungarotoxin interface with Phe(186), Tyr(187), Glu(188), and Tyr(194) in the alpha7 19-mer underscoring the importance of receptor aromatic residues as critical neurotoxin-binding determinants. Superimposing the structure of the complex onto that of the acetylcholine-binding protein (1I9B), a soluble homologue of the extracellular domain of the alpha7 receptor, places alpha-bungarotoxin at the peripheral surface of the inter-subunit interface occluding the agonist-binding site. The disulfide-rich core of alpha-bungarotoxin is suggested to be tilted in the direction of the membrane surface with finger II extending into the proposed ligand-binding cavity.  相似文献   

3.
Intact nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) tightly binds alpha-bungarotoxin. The two toxin-binding sites are presumed to be on the two alpha-subunits, either on or near the ACh-binding sites. Isolated alpha-subunits have been found to maintain weak binding to alpha-bungarotoxin (KD approximately 0.2 microM). We describe here conditions under which the alpha-subunit and a 27,000-dalton proteolytic peptide bound alpha-bungarotoxin with high affinity. The four subunits of Torpedo marmorata AChR, as well as several proteolytic peptides of the alpha-subunit, were first purified by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We found that the purified alpha-subunit (but not the beta-, gamma- or delta-subunits) and its 27,000-dalton peptide specifically bound 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin with KD approximately 3 and 6 nM, i.e., about two orders of magnitude lower than the intact AChR. Nearly 100% of the sites were recovered. The recovery of this high affinity binding required the presence of SDS (approximately 0.02%) but non-denaturing detergents had a strongly inhibitory effect. Unlabeled alpha-toxins competed with labeled alpha-bungarotoxin, alpha-bungarotoxin being more effective than all the other toxins tested. Decamethonium and hexamethonium competed efficiently with alpha-bungarotoxin binding but carbamylcholine had only a weak effect. The main immunogenic region of the AChR was only partially preserved since conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies to this region bound the alpha subunit-toxin complexes, but much less efficiently than the intact AChR. We conclude that SDS can be advantageous to the recovery of high toxin binding to the alpha subunit which still has not completely recovered its native conformation.  相似文献   

4.
We previously produced synthetic peptides mimicking the snake neurotoxin binding site of the nicotinic receptor. These peptide mimotopes bind the snake neurotoxin alpha-bungarotoxin with higher affinity than peptides reproducing native receptor sequences and inhibit toxin binding to nicotinic receptors in vitro; yet their efficiency in vivo is low. Here we synthesized one of the peptide mimotopes in a tetrabranched MAP form. The MAP peptide binds alpha-bungarotoxin in solution and inhibits its binding to the receptor with a K(A) and an IC(50) similar to the monomeric peptide. Nonetheless, it is at least 100 times more active in vivo. The MAP completely neutralizes toxin lethality when injected in mice at a dose compatible with its use as a synthetic antidote in humans. The in vivo efficacy of the tetrameric peptide cannot be ascribed to a kinetic and thermodynamic effect and is probably related to different pharmacokinetic behavior of the tetrameric molecule, with respect to the monomer. Our findings bring new perspectives to the therapeutic use of multimeric peptides.  相似文献   

5.
P T Wilson  T L Lentz 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):6667-6674
In order to investigate structure-function relationships of a segment of the acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit, binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to synthetic peptides corresponding to residues 173-204 of Torpedo, calf, and human alpha subunits was compared using a solid-phase radioassay. The affinities of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin for the calf and human peptides were 15- and 150-fold less, respectively, than for the Torpedo peptide. On the basis of nonconservative substitutions in the calf and human sequences, aromatic residues (Tyr-181, Trp-187, and Tyr-189) are important for the higher affinity binding of the Torpedo peptide. Substitution of negatively charged Glu-180 with uncharged Gln in the calf peptide did not significantly affect toxin binding, indicating Glu-180 alone does not comprise the anionic subsite on the receptor to which the cationic quaternary ammonium groups of cholinergic agents bind. d-Tubocurarine competed toxin binding to the modified calf 32-mer which lacks Glu-180 and Asp-195 present in Torpedo. Thus, the negative subsite could be formed by another negatively charged residue or by more than one amino acid side chain. It is possible that the positive charges on cholinergic ligands are countered by a negative electrostatic potential provided by polar groups, such as the hydroxyl group of tyrosine, present on several residues in this region, and the negative charges present on any of residues 175, 180, 195, or 200. Equilibrium saturation binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to Torpedo peptide 173-204 revealed a minor binding component with an apparent KD of 4.2 nM and a major component with a KD of 63 nM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
alpha-Bungarotoxin blocks acetylcholine-mediated ion channel opening of peripheral acetylcholine receptors (AChR). A major binding region for alpha-bungarotoxin has been recently identified within parts of the segment 170-204 of the alpha-subunit. We used the Pepscan systematic peptide synthesis system to determine the minimum Torpedo AChR segment required for alpha-bungarotoxin binding and to investigate the role of each residue within this segment. Continuously overlapping decapeptides within alpha 179-203 and several decapeptides covering other alpha-subunit sequences showed that alpha 188-197 and alpha 189-198 exhibited the best 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding activity (KD = 7.3 x 10(-8) and 4.3 x 10(-8) M, respectively). Several continuously overlapping nona-, octa-, hepta-, hexa-, and tetrapeptides showed that the heptapeptide alpha 189-195 was the minimum sequence with high binding activity (KD = 5.6 x 10(-8)M). d-Tubocurarine, but not carbamylcholine, blocked toxin binding. Twenty-six analogs of the alpha 188-197, most having 1 residue substituted by Ala or Gly, showed that Tyr189, Tyr190, and especially Asp195 were indispensable for 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Cys192 and Cys193 could be substituted by other amino acids, proving that the disulfide bond between alpha 192-193 was not required for alpha-bungarotoxin binding. The decreased alpha-bungarotoxin binding capacity of the equivalent human muscle AChR alpha 188-197 peptide was the result of substitution of Tyr by Thr at alpha 189.  相似文献   

7.
Human galanin is a 30 amino acid neuropeptide that elicits a range of biological activities by interaction with G protein-coupled receptors. We have generated a model of the human GALR1 galanin receptor subtype (hGALR1) based on the alpha carbon maps of frog rhodopsin and investigated the significance of potential contact residues suggested by the model using site-directed mutagenesis. Mutation of Phe186 within the second extracellular loop to Ala resulted in a 6-fold decrease in affinity for galanin, representing a change in free energy consistent with hydrophobic interaction. Our model suggests interaction between Phe186 of hGALR1 and Ala7 or Leu11 of galanin. Receptor subtype specificity was investigated by replacement of residues in hGALR1 with the corresponding residues in hGALR2 and use of the hGALR2-specific ligands hGalanin(2-30) and [D-Trp2]hGalanin(1-30). The His267Ile mutant receptor exhibited a pharmacological profile corresponding to that of hGALR1, suggesting that His267 is not involved in a receptor-ligand interaction. The mutation Phe115Ala resulted in a decreased binding affinity for hGalanin and for hGALR2-specific analogues, indicating Phe115 to be of structural importance to the ligand binding pocket of hGALR1 but not involved in direct ligand interaction. Analysis of Glu271Trp suggested that Glu271 of hGALR1 interacts with the N-terminus of galanin and that the Trp residue in the corresponding position in hGALR2 is involved in receptor subtype specificity of binding. Our model supports previous reports of Phe282 of hGALR1 interacting with Trp2 of galanin and His264 of hGALR1 interacting with Tyr9 of galanin.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions of four ligands of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor with genetically engineered peptides have been studied by NMR. A recombinant cholinergic binding site was prepared as a fusion protein between a truncated form of the bacterial protein trpE and a peptide corresponding to the sequence alpha 184-200 from the Torpedo californica receptor. This construct binds alpha-bungarotoxin while the trpE protein alone does not, and thus serves as a negative control [Aronheim, A., Eshel, Y., Mosckovitz, R., & Gershoni, J. M. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 9933-9937]. In this study agonist binding to alpha 184-200 is demonstrated by monitoring the T1 relaxation of the ligand's protons in the presence and absence of the recombinant binding site. This binding is specific as it can be competed with alpha-bungarotoxin. Quantitative analyses of such competitions yielded the concentration of binding sites, which corresponded to 3.3% and 16.5% of the total protein, for partially purified and affinity-purified alpha 184-200 constructs, respectively. The KD values for the binding of acetylcholine, nicotine, d-tubocurarine, and gallamine to the affinity-purified construct were 1.4, 1.4, 0.20, and 0.21 mM, respectively, while KD's with the nontoxin binding protein were all above 10 mM. Thus, this is a direct demonstration that the toxin binding domain alpha 184-200 may comprise a major component of the cholinergic agonist site.  相似文献   

9.
The interaction between alpha-bungarotoxin and linear synthetic peptides, mimotope of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor binding site, has been characterised extensively by several methods and a wealth of functional, kinetic and structural data are available. Hence, this system represents a suitable model to explore in detail the dynamics of a peptide-protein interaction. Here, the solution structure of a new complex of the protein toxin with a tridecapeptide ligand exhibiting high affinity has been determined by NMR. As observed for three other previously reported mimotope-alpha-bungarotoxin complexes, also in this case correlations between biological activity and kinetic data are not fully consistent with a static discussion of structural data. Molecular dynamics simulations of the four mimotope-toxin complexes indicate that a relevant contribution to the complex stability is given by the extent of the residual flexibility that the protein maintains upon peptide binding. This feature, limiting the entropy loss caused by protein folding and binding, ought to be generally considered in a rational design of specific protein ligands.  相似文献   

10.
B D Schlyer  A H Maki  E Hawrot 《FEBS letters》1992,297(1-2):87-90
Phosphorescence and optically detected magnetic resonance (ODMR) have been used to characterize two synthetic peptides, alpha 181-198 and alpha 185-196, of the major binding determinant of the alpha-acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of Torpedo californica and its interaction with alpha-bungarotoxin (BgTX) using Trp as an intrinsic probe. BgTX conformational changes are suggested upon complexation with the peptides. Methylmercury-modified peptides show conformational heterogeneity which brings some of the modified Cys residues into proximity of peptide Trp(s). These modified peptides, when bound to BgTX, undergo structural changes which remove the tagged Cys from its close contact with the Trp residue(s) of the peptide.  相似文献   

11.
We have determined the crystal structure at 1.8 A resolution of a complex of alpha-bungarotoxin with a high affinity 13-residue peptide that is homologous to the binding region of the alpha subunit of acetylcholine receptor. The peptide fits snugly to the toxin and adopts a beta hairpin conformation. The structures of the bound peptide and the homologous loop of acetylcholine binding protein, a soluble analog of the extracellular domain of acetylcholine receptor, are remarkably similar. Their superposition indicates that the toxin wraps around the receptor binding site loop, and in addition, binds tightly at the interface of two of the receptor subunits where it inserts a finger into the ligand binding site, thus blocking access to the acetylcholine binding site and explaining its strong antagonistic activity.  相似文献   

12.
The binding of 125I-labeled rabies virus to a synthetic peptide comprising residues 173-204 of the alpha 1-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor was investigated. Binding of rabies virus to the receptor peptide was dependent on pH, could be competed with by unlabeled homologous virus particles, and was saturable. Synthetic peptides of snake venom, curaremimetic neurotoxins and of the structurally similar segment of the rabies virus glycoprotein, were effective in competing with labeled virus binding to the receptor peptide at micromolar concentrations. Similarly, synthetic peptides of the binding domain on the acetylcholine receptor competed for binding. These findings suggest that both rabies virus and neurotoxins bind to residues 173-204 of the alpha 1-subunit of the acetylcholine receptor. Competition studies with shorter alpha-subunit peptides within this region indicate that the highest affinity virus binding determinants are located within residues 179-192. A rat nerve alpha 3-subunit peptide, that does not bind alpha-bungarotoxin, inhibited binding of virus to the alpha 1 peptide, suggesting that rabies binds to neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. These studies indicate that synthetic peptides of the glycoprotein binding domain and of the receptor binding domain may represent useful antiviral agents by targeting the recognition event between the viral attachment protein and the host cell receptor, and inhibiting attachment of virus to the receptor.  相似文献   

13.
alpha-Bungarotoxin, the classic nicotinic antagonist, has high specificity for muscle type alpha1 subunits in nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. In this study, we show that an 11-amino-acid pharmatope sequence, containing residues important for alpha-bungarotoxin binding to alpha1, confers functional alpha-bungarotoxin sensitivity when strategically placed into a neuronal non-alpha subunit, normally insensitive to this toxin. Remarkably, the mechanism of toxin inhibition is allosteric, not competitive as with neuromuscular nicotinic receptors. Our findings argue that alpha-bungarotoxin binding to the pharmatope, inserted at a subunit-subunit interface diametrically distinct from the agonist binding site, interferes with subunit interface movements critical for receptor activation. Our results, taken together with the structural similarities between nicotinic and GABAA receptors, suggest that this allosteric mechanism is conserved in the Cys-loop ion channel family. Furthermore, as a general strategy, the engineering of allosteric inhibitory sites through pharmatope tagging offers a powerful new tool for the study of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

14.
The structure of a peptide corresponding to residues 182-202 of the acetylcholine receptor alpha1 subunit in complex with alpha-bungarotoxin was solved using NMR spectroscopy. The peptide contains the complete sequence of the major determinant of AChR involved in alpha-bungarotoxin binding. One face of the long beta hairpin formed by the AChR peptide consists of exposed nonconserved residues, which interact extensively with the toxin. Mutations of these receptor residues confer resistance to the toxin. Conserved AChR residues form the opposite face of the beta hairpin, which creates the inner and partially hidden pocket for acetylcholine. An NMR-derived model for the receptor complex with two alpha-bungarotoxin molecules shows that this pocket is occupied by the conserved alpha-neurotoxin residue R36, which forms cation-pi interactions with both alphaW149 and gammaW55/deltaW57 of the receptor and mimics acetylcholine.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
Bacterially expressed cDNA fragments of the alpha-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor previously have been shown to bind alpha-bungarotoxin (Gershoni, J. M. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 84, 4318-4321). Here, a novel system has been developed in which totally synthetic alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites are expressed in Escherichia coli transformants. The amino acid sequences, alpha 184-200 and alpha 184-196 of the Torpedo californica alpha-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor were expressed as trpE fusion proteins via the expression vector pATH2 and a method for the enrichment of these fusion proteins is described. Quantitative analysis of toxin binding to the recombinant binding sites demonstrates that they bind toxin with affinities of KD = 2.5 X 10(-7) and 4.7 X 10(-6) M, respectively. Furthermore, the pharmacological profile of alpha 184-200 qualitatively reflects that of the intact receptor. These data not only indicate that the area of alpha 184-200 is an essential element of the cholinergic binding site but that residues alpha 197-200 contribute a point of contact between the receptor and alpha-bungarotoxin.  相似文献   

17.
The sequence segment 181-200 of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) alpha subunit forms a binding site for alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) [e.g., see Conti-Tronconi, B. M., Tang, F., Diethelm, B. M., Spencer, S. R., Reinhardt-Maelicke, S., & Maelicke, A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 6221-6230]. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the homologous sequences of human, calf, mouse, chicken, frog, and cobra muscle nAChR alpha 1 subunits were tested for their ability to bind 125I-alpha-BTX, and differences in alpha-BTX affinity were determined by using solution (IC50S) and solid-phase (KdS) assays. Panels of overlapping peptides corresponding to the complete alpha 1 subunit of mouse and human were also tested for alpha-BTX binding, but other sequence segments forming the alpha-BTX site were not consistently detectable. The Torpedo alpha 1(181-200) and the homologous frog and chicken peptides bound alpha-BTX with higher affinity (KdS approximately 1-2 microM, IC50s approximately 1-2 microM) than the human and calf peptides (Kds approximately 3-5 microM, IC50s approximately 15 microM). The mouse peptide bound alpha-BTX weakly when attached to a solid support (Kd approximately 8 microM) but was effective in competing for 125I-alpha-BTX in solution (IC50 approximately 1 microM). The cobra nAChR alpha 1-subunit peptide did not detectably bind alpha-BTX in either assay. Amino acid substitutions were correlated with alpha-BTX binding activity peptides from different species. The role of a putative vicinal disulfide bound between Cys-192 and -193, relative to the Torpedo sequence, was determined by modifying the peptides with sulfhydryl reagents. Reduction and alkylation of the peptides decreased alpha-BTX binding, whereas oxidation of the peptides had little effect. Modifications of the cysteine/cystine residues of the cobra peptide failed to induce alpha-BTX binding activity. These results indicate that while the adjacent cysteines are likely to be involved in forming the toxin/alpha 1-subunit interface a vicinal disulfide bound was not required for alpha-BTX binding.  相似文献   

18.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to 57% of the sequence of alpha subunits of acetylcholine receptors from Torpedo californica electric organ and extending from the NH2 to the COOCH terminus have been synthesized. The alpha-bungarotoxin binding site on denatured alpha subunits was mapped within the sequence alpha 185-199 by assaying binding of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin to slot blots of synthetic peptides. Further studies showed that residues in the sequence alpha 190-194, especially cysteines-alpha 192, 193, were critical for binding alpha-bungarotoxin. Reduction and alkylation studies suggested that these cysteines must be disulfide linked for alpha-bungarotoxin to bind. Binding sites for serum antibodies to native receptors or alpha subunits were mapped by indirect immunoprecipitation of 125I-peptides. Several antigenic sequences were identified, but a synthetic peptide corresponding to the main immunogenic region (which is highly conformation dependent) was not identified.  相似文献   

19.
The sequence of the alpha-chain of the acetylcholine receptor of T. californica has been determined by recent cloning studies. The integrity of the disulphide bond between Cys-128 and cys-142 has been shown to be important for the maintenance of the binding activity of the receptor, thus implicating the regions around the disulphide bridge in binding with acetylcholine. In the present work, a synthetic peptide containing this loop region (residues 125-147) was synthesized. Solid-phase radiometric binding assays demonstrated a high binding of 125I-labelled alpha-bungarotoxin to the synthetic peptide. It was further shown that the free peptide bound well to [3H]acetylcholine. Additional experiments demonstrated that pretreatment of peptide 125-147 with 2-mercaptoethanol destroyed its binding activity, clearly showing that the integrity of the disulphide structure was essential for binding. Unlabelled acetylcholine also inhibited the binding of labelled acetylcholine to the synthetic peptide. The region 125-147, therefore, contains essential elements of the acetylcholine binding site of the Torpedo receptor.  相似文献   

20.
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