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1.
2.
The nicotinic receptor (AChR) is a pentamer of homologous subunits with an alpha(2)betaepsilondelta composition in adult muscle. Each subunit contains four transmembrane domains (M1-M4). Position 15' of the M1 domain is phenylalanine in alpha subunits while it is isoleucine in non-alpha subunits. Given this peculiar conservation pattern, we studied its contribution to muscle AChR activation by combining mutagenesis with single-channel kinetic analysis. AChRs containing the mutant alpha subunit (alphaF15'I) as well as those containing the reverse mutations in the non-alpha subunits (betaI15'F, deltaI15'F, and epsilonI15'F) show prolonged lifetimes of the diliganded open channel resulting from a slower closing rate with respect to wild-type AChRs. The kinetic changes are not equivalent among subunits, the beta subunit, being the one that produces the most significant stabilization of the open state. Kinetic analysis of betaI15'F of AChR channels activated by the low-efficacious agonist choline revealed a 10-fold decrease in the closing rate, a 2.5-fold increase in the opening rate, a 28-fold increase in the gating equilibrium constant in the diliganded receptor, and a significant increase opening in the absence of agonist. Mutations at betaI15' showed that the structural bases of its contribution to gating is complex. Rate-equilibrium linear free-energy relationships suggest an approximately 70% closed-state-like environment for the beta15' position at the transition state of gating. The overall results identify position 15' as a subunit-selective determinant of channel gating and add new experimental evidence that gives support to the involvement of the M1 domain in the operation of the channel gating apparatus.  相似文献   

3.
Kinetics of unliganded acetylcholine receptor channel gating.   总被引:9,自引:1,他引:9       下载免费PDF全文
Open- and closed-state lifetimes of unliganded acetylcholine receptor channel activity were analyzed by the method of likelihood maximazation. For both open times and closed times, the best-fitting density is most often a sum of two exponentials. These multiple open states cannot depend on the number of receptor binding sites occupied since they are observed in the absence of ligand. The rate of spontaneous opening and the faster decay constant of closing increased as the membrane was hyperpolarized. The voltage dependence of the rate of spontaneous opening is stronger than that for curare-liganded channels. Evidence that the acetylcholine receptor channel can open spontaneously in the absence of ligand has been presented previously (Sanchez et al, 1983; Brehm et al, 1984; Jackson, 1984). To add to this evidence, alpha-bungarotoxin was added to the patch electrode, causing the frequency of openings to decay with time. The rate constant determined from this decay is similar to rate constants reported for the binding of iodinated alpha-bungarotoxin to the acetylcholine receptor. The frequency of unliganded channel opening has been estimated as 2 X 10(-3) s-1 per receptor. A comparison of carbamylcholine-liganded and spontaneous gating transition rates suggests that ligand binding increases the rate of opening by a factor of 1.4 X 10(7). Carbamylcholine binding increases the mean open time by a factor of 5. Thus, a cholinergic agonist activates the acetylcholine receptor by destabilizing the closed state. The liganded and unliganded channel gating rates were used to analyze the energetics of ligand activation of the acetylcholine receptor channel, and to relate the open channel dissociation constant to the closed channel dissociation constant.  相似文献   

4.
Grosman C 《Biochemistry》2003,42(50):14977-14987
Acetylcholine-receptor channels (AChRs) are allosteric membrane proteins that mediate synaptic transmission by alternatively opening and closing ("gating") a cation-selective transmembrane pore. Although ligand binding is not required for the channel to open, the binding of agonists (for example, acetylcholine) increases the closed right harpoon over left harpoon open equilibrium constant because the ion-impermeable --> ion-permeable transition of the ion pathway is accompanied by a low-affinity --> high-affinity change at the agonist-binding sites. The fact that the gating conformational change of muscle AChRs can be kinetically modeled as a two-state reaction has paved the way to the experimental characterization of the corresponding transition state, which represents a snapshot of the continuous sequence of molecular events separating the closed and open states. Previous studies of fully (di) liganded AChRs, combining single-channel kinetic measurements, site-directed mutagenesis, and data analysis in the framework of the linear free-energy relationships of physical organic chemistry, have suggested a transition-state structure that is consistent with channel opening being an asynchronous conformational change that starts at the extracellular agonist-binding sites and propagates toward the intracellular end of the pore. In this paper, I characterize the gating transition state of unliganded AChRs, and report a remarkable difference: unlike that of diliganded gating, the unliganded transition state is not a hybrid of the closed- and open-state structures but, rather, is almost indistinguishable from the open state itself. This displacement of the transition state along the reaction coordinate obscures the mechanism underlying the unliganded closed right harpoon over left harpoon open reaction but brings to light the malleable nature of free-energy landscapes of ion-channel gating.  相似文献   

5.
Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) channels with proline (P) mutations in the putative pore-forming domain (at the 12' position of the M2 segment) were examined at the single-channel level. For all subunits (alpha, beta, epsilon, and delta), a 12'P mutation increased the open channel lifetime >5-fold. To facilitate the estimation of binding and gating rate constants, subunits with 12'P mutations were co-expressed with alpha subunits having a binding site mutation that slows channel opening (alphaD200N). In these AChRs, a 12'P mutation in epsilon or beta slowed the closing rate constant approximately 6-fold but had no effect on either the channel opening rate constant or the equilibrium dissociation constant for ACh (Kd). In contrast, a 12'P mutation in delta slowed the channel closing rate constant only approximately 2-fold and significantly increased both the channel opening rate constant and the Kd. Pairwise expression of 12'P subunits indicates that mutations in epsilon and beta act nearly independently, but one in delta reduces the effect of a homologous mutation in epsilon or beta. The results suggest that a 12'P mutation in epsilon and beta has mainly local effects, whereas one in delta has both local and distributed effects that influence both agonist binding and channel gating.  相似文献   

6.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) is a ligand-gated ion channel that switches upon activation from a closed state to a full conducting state. We found that the mutation delta S268K, located at 12' position of the second transmembrane domain of the delta subunit of the human nAChR generates a long-lived intermediate conducting state, from which openings to a wild-type like conductance level occur on a submillisecond time scale. Aiming to understand the interplay between structural changes near the 12' position and channel gating, we investigated the influence of various parameters: different ligands (acetylcholine, choline and epibatidine), ligand concentrations, transmembrane voltages and both fetal and adult nAChRs. Since sojourns in the high conductance state are not fully resolved in time, spectral noise analysis was used as a complement to dwell time analysis to determine the gating rate constants. Open channel current fluctuations are described by a two-state Markov model. The characteristic time of the process is markedly influenced by the ligand and the receptor type, whereas the frequency of openings to the high conductance state increases with membrane hyperpolarization. Conductance changes are discussed with regard to reversible transfer reaction of single protons at the lysine 12' side chain.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Acetylcholine receptor channel gating is a brownian conformational cascade in which nanometer-sized domains ("Phi blocks") move in staggering sequence to link an affinity change at the transmitter binding sites with a conductance change in the pore. In the alpha-subunit, the first Phi-block to move during channel opening is comprised of residues near the transmitter binding site and the second is comprised of residues near the base of the extracellular domain. We used the rate constants estimated from single-channel currents to infer the gating dynamics of Y127 and K145, in the inner and outer sheet of the beta-core of the alpha-subunit. Y127 is at the boundary between the first and second Phi blocks, at a subunit interface. alphaY127 mutations cause large changes in the gating equilibrium constant and with a characteristic Phi-value (Phi = 0.77) that places this residue in the second Phi-block. We also examined the effect on gating of mutations in neighboring residues deltaI43 (Phi = 0.86), epsilonN39 (complex kinetics), alphaI49 (no effect) and in residues that are homologous to alphaY127 on the epsilon, beta, and delta subunits (no effect). The extent to which alphaY127 gating motions are coupled to its neighbors was estimated by measuring the kinetic and equilibrium constants of constructs having mutations in alphaY127 (in both alpha subunits) plus residues alphaD97 or deltaI43. The magnitude of the coupling between alphaD97 and alphaY127 depended on the alphaY127 side chain and was small for both H (0.53 kcal/mol) and C (-0.37 kcal/mol) substitutions. The coupling across the single alpha-delta subunit boundary was larger (0.84 kcal/mol). The Phi-value for K145 (0.96) indicates that its gating motion is correlated temporally with the motions of residues in the first Phi-block and is not synchronous with those of alphaY127. This suggests that the inner and outer sheets of the alpha-subunit beta-core do not rotate as a rigid body.  相似文献   

9.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) channels at neuromuscular synapses rarely open in the absence of agonists, but many different mutations increase the unliganded gating equilibrium constant (E0) to generate AChRs that are active constitutively. We measured E0 for two different sets of mutant combinations and by extrapolation estimated E0 for wild-type AChRs. The estimates were 7.6 and 7.8×10(-7) in adult-type mouse AChRs (-100 mV at 23°C). The values are in excellent agreement with one obtained previously by using a completely different method (6.5×10(-7), from monoliganded gating). E0 decreases with depolarization to the same extent as does the diliganded gating equilibrium constant, e-fold with ~60 mV. We estimate that at -100 mV the intrinsic energy of the unliganded gating isomerization is +8.4 kcal/mol (35 kJ/mol), and that in the absence of a membrane potential, the intrinsic chemical energy of this global conformational change is +9.4 kcal/mol (39 kJ/mol). Na+ and K+ in the extracellular solution have no measureable effect on E0, which suggests that unliganded gating occurs with only water occupying the transmitter binding sites. The results are discussed with regard to the energy changes in receptor activation and the competitive antagonism of ions in agonist binding.  相似文献   

10.
We derive the analytical form of a rate-equilibrium free-energy relationship (with slope Phi) for a bounded, linear chain of coupled reactions having arbitrary connecting rate constants. The results confirm previous simulation studies showing that Phi-values reflect the position of the perturbed reaction within the chain, with reactions occurring earlier in the sequence producing higher Phi-values than those occurring later in the sequence. The derivation includes an expression for the transmission coefficients of the overall reaction based on the rate constants of an arbitrary, discrete, finite Markov chain. The results indicate that experimental Phi-values can be used to calculate the relative heights of the energy barriers between intermediate states of the chain but provide no information about the energies of the wells along the reaction path. Application of the equations to the case of diliganded acetylcholine receptor channel gating suggests that the transition-state ensemble for this reaction is nearly flat. Although this mechanism accounts for many of the basic features of diliganded and unliganded acetylcholine receptor channel gating, the experimental rate-equilibrium free-energy relationships appear to be more linear than those predicted by the theory.  相似文献   

11.
The adult form of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) consists of five subunits (alpha(2)betaepsilondelta), each having four transmembrane domains (M1-M4). The atomic model of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor shows that the pore-lining M2 domains make no extensive contacts with the rest of the transmembrane domains. However, there are several sites where close appositions between segments occur. It has been suggested that the pair alphaM1-F15' and alphaM2-L11' is one of the potential interactions between segments. To determine experimentally if these residues are interacting and to explore if this interhelical interaction is essential for channel gating, we combined mutagenesis with single-channel kinetic analysis. Mutations in alphaM1-F15' lead to profound changes in the opening rate and slighter changes in the closing rate. Channel gating is impaired as the volume of the residue increases. Rate-equilibrium linear free-energy relationship analysis reveals an approximately 70% open-state-like environment for alphaM1-F15' at the transition state of the gating reaction, suggesting that it moves early during the gating process. Replacing the residue at alphaM1-15' by that at alphaM2-11' and vice versa profoundly alters gating, but the combination of the two mutations restores gating to near normal, indicating that alphaM1-F15' and alphaM2-L11' are interchangeable. Double-mutant cycle analysis shows that these residues are energetically coupled. Thus, the interaction between M1 and M2 plays a key role in channel gating.  相似文献   

12.
Agonist molecules at the two neuromuscular acetylcholine (ACh) receptor (AChR) transmitter-binding sites increase the probability of channel opening. In one hypothesis for AChR activation (“priming”), the capping of loop C at each binding site transfers energy independently to the distant gate over a discrete structural pathway. We used single-channel analyses to examine the experimental support for this proposal with regard to brief unliganded openings, the effects of loop-C modifications, the effects of mutations to residues either on or off the putative pathway, and state models for describing currents at low [ACh]. The results show that (a) diliganded and brief unliganded openings are generated by the same essential, global transition; (b) the radical manipulation of loop C does not prevent channel opening but impairs agonist binding; (c) both on- and off-pathway mutations alter gating by changing the relative stability of the open-channel conformation by local interactions rather than by perturbing a specific site–gate communication link; and (d) it is possible to estimate directly the rate constants for agonist dissociation from and association to both the low and high affinity forms of the AChR-binding site by using a cyclic kinetic model. We conclude that the mechanism of energy transfer between the binding sites and the gate remains an open question.  相似文献   

13.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor channel (AChR) gating is an organized sequence of molecular motions that couples a change in the affinity for ligands at the two transmitter binding sites with a change in the ionic conductance of the pore. Loop 5 (L5) is a nine-residue segment (mouse alpha-subunit 92-100) that links the beta4 and beta5 strands of the extracellular domain and that (in the alpha-subunit) contains binding segment A. Based on the structure of the acetylcholine binding protein, we speculate that in AChRs L5 projects from the transmitter binding site toward the membrane along a subunit interface. We used single-channel kinetics to quantify the effects of mutations to alphaD97 and other L5 residues with respect to agonist binding (to both open and closed AChRs), channel gating (for both unliganded and fully-liganded AChRs), and desensitization. Most alphaD97 mutations increase gating (up to 168-fold) but have little or no effect on ligand binding or desensitization. Rate-equilibrium free energy relationship analysis indicates that alphaD97 moves early in the gating reaction, in synchrony with the movement of the transmitter binding site (Phi = 0.93, which implies an open-like character at the transition state). alphaD97 mutations in the two alpha-subunits have unequal energetic consequences for gating, but their contributions are independent. We conclude that the key, underlying functional consequence of alphaD97 perturbations is to increase the unliganded gating equilibrium constant. L5 emerges as an important and early link in the AChR gating reaction which, in the absence of agonist, serves to increase the relative stability of the closed conformation of the protein.  相似文献   

14.
Stewart DS  Chiara DC  Cohen JB 《Biochemistry》2006,45(35):10641-10653
A molecule as simple in structure as tetramethylammonium gates the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) with high efficacy. To compare the structure of the nAChR transmitter binding site in the open channel state with that of the ACh binding protein, we determined the efficacy of nAChR gating by -S(CH(2))(n)N(CH(3))(3)(+) (n = 1-4) tethered to substituted cysteines at positions in the alpha subunits or gamma and delta subunits predicted to contribute to the ACh binding sites in mutant Torpedo nAChRs expressed in Xenopus oocytes. For tethered thiocholine [-S(CH(2))(2)N(CH(3))(3)(+)], we previously reported that within alpha195-201 gating was observed only at alphaY198C while at alphaY93C it acted as an antagonist. We now show that within alpha191-194, thiocholine activates when tethered at alphaCys192 or alphaCys193. Thiocholine also activates when tethered at alphaY190C or alphaW149C in nAChRs containing a beta subunit mutation (betaL257S) that destabilizes the closed channel, but not from gammaW55C/deltaW57C, where longer adducts can activate. When tethered at positions in binding site segment E, thiocholine activates only from gammaL119C/deltaL121C, where the shorter -S(CH(2))(1)N(CH3)(3)(+) acts as an antagonist. Longer adducts tethered at gammaL109C/deltaL111C or gammaL119C/deltaL121C also activate, but less efficiently. The length requirements for efficient gating by tethered agonists agree closely with predictions based upon the structure of the agonist site in a nAChR homology model derived from the ACh binding protein structure, which suggests that this structure is an excellent model of the nAChR agonist binding site in the open channel conformation. The inability of thiocholine to activate from alphaY93C, which is not predicted by the model, is discussed in terms of the structure of the nAChR in the closed state.  相似文献   

15.
Muscle acetylcholine receptors are synaptic ion channels that "gate" between closed- and open-channel conformations. We used Phi-value analysis to probe the transition state of the diliganded gating reaction with regard to residues in the M3, membrane-spanning helix of the muscle acetylcholine receptor alpha-subunit. Phi (a fraction between 1 and 0) parameterizes the extent to which a mutation changes the opening versus the closing rate constant and, for a linear reaction mechanism, the higher the Phi-value, the "earlier" the gating motion. In the upper half of alphaM3 the gating motions of all five tested residues were temporally correlated (Phi approximately 0.30) and serve to link structural changes occurring at the middle of the M2, pore-lining helix with those occurring at the interface of the extracellular and transmembrane domains. alphaM3 belongs to a complex and diverse set of synchronously moving parts that change structure relatively late in the channel-opening process. The propagation of the gating Brownian conformational cascade has a complex spatial distribution in the transmembrane domain.  相似文献   

16.
Hydrophobic antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor inhibit channel activity by binding within the transmembrane pore formed by the second of four transmembrane domains (M2) on each of the receptor's subunits. Hydrophobic mutagenesis near the middle (10' locus) of the alpha-subunit M2 domain results in channels that are much more sensitive to block by long-chain alcohols and general anesthetics, indicating that the inhibitory site on wild-type receptors is nearby. To determine whether other receptor subunits also contribute to the blocker site, the hydrophobic mutagenesis strategy was extended to all four subunits at 10' loci. alpha S10'l causes the largest increase in apparent hexanol binding (4.3-fold compared to wild type), approximately twice the size of the change caused by beta T10'l (2.2-fold). gamma A10'l and delta A10'l mutations cause much smaller changes in apparent hexanol binding affinity (about 1.2-fold each), even when corrected for their smaller degree of side-chain hydrophobicity changes. When 10'l mutant subunits are coexpressed, the change from wild type in apparent hexanol binding energy (delta delta Gmixture) is roughly equal to the sum of hexanol binding energy changes for the constituent mutant subunits (sigma delta delta Gsubunits). The simplest model consistent with these results is one in which hydrophobic blockers make simultaneous contact with all five M2 10' residues, but the extent of contact is much greater for the alpha and beta than for gamma and delta side chains.  相似文献   

17.
In vivo, agonist binding to the open conformation of the ligand binding domain initiates the process of gating in ionotropic glutamate receptors. Arguably, an alternative manner to gate the receptors exists, which requires a point mutation in the most-conserved sequence motif in the second transmembrane domain. Originally, this mutation occurred spontaneously in the orphan glutamate receptor subunit delta2, causing the ataxic phenotype of lurcher mice.1 In the absence of a ligand that could initiate gating at this orphan subunit, the introduction of the lurcher mutation led to spontaneous currents through delta2-lurcher channels.1 Introduction of the corresponding mutation into the AMPA receptor GluR1 induced a number of aberrant gating properties.2-5 Among those, glutamate potency was highly increased, and competitive antagonists suddenly behaved as partial agonists.2,5 We reported that the introduction of delta2 amino acids in the domain preceding the first transmembrane domain in GluR1 resulted in a mutant receptor that displayed all characteristics of lurcher-typical gating. We proposed that lurcher-like mutations work to enhance gating by destabilizing the closed state of the receptor. As a result, no or minimal conformational changes in the ligand binding domain are sufficient for gating, explaining, respectively, why spontaneous currents and competitive antagonists act as partial agonists in lurcher-like channels. Strikingly, a similar conversion of antagonists upon coexpression of TARPs with glutamate receptors has recently been reported.6,7 We take this as indication that the actual mechanism of action might be very similar, and that both lurcher-like mutations and TARPs work as 'gating enhancers'.  相似文献   

18.
The muscle nicotinic receptor (AChR) is a pentamer of four different subunits, each of which contains four transmembrane domains (M1-M4). We recently showed that channel opening and closing rates of the AChR depend on a hydrogen bond involving a threonine at position 14' of the M4 domain in the alpha-subunit. To determine whether residues in equivalent positions in non-alpha-subunits contribute to channel gating, we mutated deltaT14', betaT14', and epsilonS14' and evaluated changes in the kinetics of acetylcholine-activated currents. The mutation epsilonS14'A profoundly slows the rate of channel closing, an effect opposite to that produced by mutation of alphaT14'. Unlike mutations of alphaT14', epsilonS14'A does not affect the rate of channel opening. Mutations in deltaT14' and betaT14' do not affect channel opening or closing kinetics, showing that conserved residues are not functionally equivalent in all subunits. Whereas alphaT14'A and epsilonS14'A subunits contribute additively to the closing rate, they contribute nonadditively to the opening rate. Substitution of residues preserving the hydrogen bonding ability at position 14' produce nearly normal gating kinetics. Thus, we identify subunit-specific contributions to channel gating of equivalent residues in M4 and elucidate the underlying mechanistic and structural bases.  相似文献   

19.
Cymes GD  Grosman C  Auerbach A 《Biochemistry》2002,41(17):5548-5555
The gating mechanism of the acetylcholine receptor channel (AChR) was investigated by using rate equilibrium linear free energy relationships (LFERs) to probe the transition state between the closed and open conformations. The properties of the transition state of gating in the second transmembrane segment (M2) of the delta subunit, one of the five homologous pore-lining segments, was measured on a residue-by-residue basis. Series of point mutations were engineered at individual positions of this domain, and the corresponding constructs were characterized electrophysiologically, at the single-channel level. Fully liganded AChR opening and closing rate constants were estimated, and Phi-values (which are a measure of the extent of the conformational change realized at the transition state) were calculated for each reaction series as the slope of the Br?nsted relationship (log rate constant versus log equilibrium constant). Our results indicate that, at the transition state of gating, the extracellular half of deltaM2 partly resembles the open state (Phi-values between 0.24 and 0.38) while the intracellular half completely resembles the closed state (Phi-values between -0.18 and 0.03), with a break point near the middle of the M2 segment. This suggests that during gating the two halves of deltaM2 move asynchronously, with the rearrangement of the extracellular portion preceding (following) that of the intracellular part of deltaM2 during opening (closing). This particular sequence of molecular events indicates that the gating conformational change, which starts at the extracellular acetylcholine-binding sites (when opening), does not propagate exclusively along the primary sequence of the protein. In addition, our data are consistent with the deltaM2 segment bending or swiveling around its central residues during gating. We also elaborate on unsettled aspects of the analysis such as the accuracy of two-point LFERs, the physical interpretation of fractional Phi-values, and the existence of single versus parallel transition states for the gating reaction.  相似文献   

20.
The muscle acetylcholine receptor channel (AChR) is a large (Mr 290K) transmembrane protein that mediates synaptic transmission. Theactivation of this ion channel can be understood in the framework of athermodynamic cycle with spontaneous gating (i.e., the closed open reaction) and ligand-binding events as the elementary steps. Becauseagonists bind more tightly to the open than to the closed state, gating ofliganded receptors is more favorable than that of unliganded receptors.Accordingly, channel opening must involve two major conformationalchanges: the ACh-binding sites switch from a low-affinity to a high-affinityform, and the pore (located 45 Å away from the binding sites)switches from an ion-impermeable to an ion-permeable conformation. Togain insight into the reaction mechanism of fully-liganded gating, wecharacterized the corresponding transition state in the context of the `linearfree-energy relationships' of physical organic chemistry (-valueanalysis). Gating of fully-liganded AChRs was studied by recordingsingle-channel currents using the patch-clamp technique. Perturbations tothe wild-type receptor were either series of different mutations at individualpositions or series of different agonists. Based on the obtained `snapshot'of the gating reaction at the transition state, and aware of the lack ofinformation about the rest of the energy profile, the most parsimoniousmechanism seems to be one where opening proceeds asynchronously, withthe low-to-high affinity change at the binding sites preceding the completeopening of the distant pore.  相似文献   

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