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1.
P Blount  J P Merlie 《Neuron》1989,3(3):349-357
We have stably expressed in fibroblasts different pairs of alpha and non-alpha subunits of the mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The gamma and delta, but not the beta, subunits associated efficiently with the alpha subunit, and they extensively modified its binding characteristics. The alpha gamma and alpha delta complexes formed distinctly different high affinity binding sites for the competitive antagonist d-tubocurarine that, together, completely accounted for the two nonequivalent antagonist binding sites in native AChR. The alpha delta complex and native AChR had similar affinities for the agonist carbamylcholine. In contrast, although the alpha gamma complex contains the higher affinity competitive antagonist binding site, it had an affinity for carbamylcholine that was an order of magnitude less than that of the alpha delta complex or the AChR. The comparatively low agonist affinity of the alpha gamma complex may represent an allosterically regulated binding site in the native AChR. These data support a model of two nonequivalent binding sites within the AChR and imply that the basis for this nonequivalence is the association of the alpha subunit with the gamma or delta subunit.  相似文献   

2.
W N Green  A F Ross  T Claudio 《Neuron》1991,7(4):659-666
Different combinations of Torpedo acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits stably expressed in mouse fibroblasts were used to establish a role for phosphorylation in AChR biogenesis. When cell lines expressing fully functional AChR complexes (alpha 2 beta gamma delta) were labeled with 32P, only gamma and delta subunits were phosphorylated. Forskolin, which causes a 2- to 3-fold increase in AChR expression by stimulating subunit assembly, increased unassembled gamma phosphorylation, but had little effect on unassembled delta. The forskolin effect on subunit phosphorylation was rapid, significantly preceding its effect on expression. The pivotal role of the gamma subunit was established by treating alpha beta gamma and alpha beta delta cell lines with forskolin and observing increased expression of only alpha beta gamma complexes. This effect was also observed in alpha gamma, but not alpha delta cells. We conclude that the cAMP-induced increase in expression of cell surface AChRs is due to phosphorylation of unassembled gamma subunits, which leads to increased efficiency of assembly of all four subunits.  相似文献   

3.
A slow conformational change in newly synthesized acetylcholine receptor subunits is thought to be a requisite step in the biogenesis of this multi-subunit transmembrane glycoprotein. Previously, we demonstrated that this early conformational change within the alpha-subunit was inefficient and dependent upon disulfide bond formation (Blount, P. and J.P. Merlie. 1990. J. Cell Biol. 111:2613-2622). Here we show that newly synthesized acetylcholine receptor subunits and subunit complexes in the muscle-like cell line, BC3H-1, are associated with Bip, a ubiquitous binding protein of the endoplasmic reticulum. Characterization of the Bip/alpha-subunit complex in stably transfected fibroblasts revealed that Bip associates with newly synthesized unassembled alpha-subunit and some alpha gamma and alpha delta subunit complexes. Significantly, Bip does not associate well with the more mature form of the alpha-subunit containing an intramolecular disulfide bridge. Hence, Bip may play an important role in the conformational maturation and/or editing of unassembled AChR subunits and subunit complexes in vivo.  相似文献   

4.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2613-2622
The structural elements required for normal maturation and assembly of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit were investigated by expression of mutated subunits in transfected fibroblasts. Normally, the wild-type alpha subunit acquires high affinity alpha bungarotoxin binding in a time-dependent manner; however, mutation of the 128 and/or 142 cysteines to either serine or alanine, as well as deletion of the entire 14 amino acids in this region abolished all detectable high affinity binding. Nonglycosylated subunits that had a serine to glycine mutation in the consensus sequence also did not efficiently attain high affinity binding to toxin. In contrast, mutation of the proline at position 136 to glycine or alanine, or a double mutation of the cysteines at position 192 and 193 to serines had no effect on the acquisition of high affinity toxin binding. These data suggest that a disulfide bridge between cysteines 128 and 142 and oligosaccharide addition at asparagine 141 are required for the normal maturation of alpha subunit as assayed by high affinity toxin binding. The unassembled wild-type alpha subunit expressed in fibroblasts is normally degraded with a t1/2 of 2 h; upon assembly with the delta subunit, the degradation rate slows significantly (t1/2 greater than 13 h). All mutated alpha subunits retained the capacity to assemble with a delta subunit coexpressed in fibroblasts; however, mutated alpha subunits that were not glycosylated or did not acquire high affinity toxin binding were rapidly degraded (t1/2 = 20 min to 2 h) regardless of whether or not they assembled with the delta subunit. Assembly and rapid degradation of nonglycosylated acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits and subunit complexes were also observed in tunicamycin- treated BC3H-1 cells, a mouse musclelike cell line that normally expresses functional AChR. Hence, rapid degradation may be one form of regulation assuring that only correctly processed and assembled subunits accumulate, and ultimately make functional receptors in AChR- expressing cells.  相似文献   

5.
Incorporation of the epsilon subunit into the GABAA receptor has been suggested to confer unusual, but variable, biophysical and pharmacological characteristics to both recombinant and native receptors. Due to their structural similarity with the gamma subunits, epsilon subunits have been assumed to substitute at the single position of the gamma subunit in assembled receptors. However, prior work suggests that functional variability in epsilon-containing receptors may reflect alternative sites of incorporation and of not just one, but possibly multiple epsilon subunits in the pentameric receptor complex. Here we present data indicating that increased expression of epsilon, in conjunction with alpha2 and beta3 subunits, results in expression of GABAA receptors with correspondingly altered rectification, deactivation and levels of spontaneous openings, but not increased total current density. We also provide data that the epsilon subunit, like the beta3 subunit, can self-export and data from chimeric receptors suggesting that similarities between the assembly domains of the beta3 and the epsilon subunits may allow the epsilon subunit to replace the beta, as well as the gamma, subunit. The substitution of an epsilon for a beta, as well as the gamma subunit and formation of receptors with alternative patterns of assembly with respect to epsilon incorporation may underlie the observed variability in both biophysical and pharmacological properties noted not only in recombinant, but also in native receptors.  相似文献   

6.
Assembly of Torpedo acetylcholine receptors in Xenopus oocytes   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
To study pathways by which acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits might assemble, Torpedo alpha subunits were expressed in Xenopus oocytes alone or in combination with beta, gamma, or delta subunits. The maturation of the conformation of the main immunogenic region (MIR) on alpha subunits was measured by binding of mAbs and the maturation of the conformation of the AChR binding site on alpha subunits was measured by binding of alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha Bgt) and cholinergic ligands. The size of subunits and subunit complexes was assayed by sedimentation on sucrose gradients. It is generally accepted that native AChRs have the subunit composition alpha 2 beta gamma delta. Torpedo alpha subunits expressed alone resulted in an amorphous range of complexes with little affinity for alpha Bgt or mAbs to the MIR, rather than in a unique 5S monomeric assembly intermediate species. A previously recognized temperature-dependent failure in alpha subunit maturation may cause instability of the monomeric assembly intermediate and accumulation of aggregated denatured alpha subunits. Coexpression of alpha with beta subunits also resulted in an amorphous range of complexes. However, coexpression of alpha subunits with gamma or delta subunits resulted in the efficient formation of 6.5S alpha gamma or alpha delta complexes with high affinity for mAbs to the MIR, alpha Bgt, and small cholinergic ligands. These alpha gamma and alpha delta subunit pairs may represent normal assembly intermediates in which Torpedo alpha is stabilized and matured in conformation. Coexpression of alpha, gamma, and delta efficiently formed 8.8S complexes, whereas complexes containing alpha beta and gamma or alpha beta and delta subunits are formed less efficiently. Assembly of beta subunits with complexes containing alpha gamma and delta subunits may normally be a rate-limiting step in assembly of AChRs.  相似文献   

7.
Each subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) contains two conserved cysteine residues, which are known to form a disulfide bond, in the N-terminal extracellular domain. The role of this retained structural feature in the biogenesis of the AChR was studied by expressing site-directed mutant alpha and beta subunits together with other normal subunits from Torpedo californica AChR in Xenopus oocytes. Mutation of the cysteines at position 128 or 142 in the alpha subunit, or in the beta subunit, did not prevent subunit assembly. All Cys128 and Cys142 mutants of the alpha and beta subunits were able to associate with coexpressed other normal subunits, although associational efficiency of the mutant alpha subunits with the delta subunit was reduced. Functional studies of the mutant AChR complexes showed that the mutations in the alpha subunit abolished detectable 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BuTX) binding in whole oocytes, whereas the mutations in the beta subunit resulted in decreased total binding of 125I-alpha-BuTX and no detectable surface 125I-alpha-BuTX binding. Additionally, all mutant subunits, when co-expressed with the other normal subunits in oocytes, produced small acetylcholine-activated membrane currents, suggesting incorporation of only small numbers of functional mutant AChRs into the plasma membrane. The functional acetylcholine-gated ion channel formed with mutant alpha subunits, but not mutant beta subunits, could not be blocked by alpha-BuTX. Thus, a disulfide bond between Cys128 and Cys142 of the AChR alpha or beta subunits is not needed for acetylcholine-binding. However, this disulfide bond on the alpha subunit is necessary for formation of the alpha-BuTX-binding site. These results also suggest that the most significant effect caused by disrupting the conserved disulfide loop structure is intracellular retention of most of the assembled AChR complexes.  相似文献   

8.
Y Gu  Z W Hall 《Neuron》1988,1(2):117-125
We used specific antibodies to gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits to characterize acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in extracts and at endplates of developing, adult, and denervated rat muscle. The AChRs in normal adult muscle were immunoprecipitated by anti-epsilon and anti-delta, but not by anti-gamma antibodies, whereas AChRs in denervated and embryonic muscles were precipitated by anti-gamma and anti-delta, but showed little or no reactivity to anti-epsilon antibodies. In immunofluorescence experiments, AChRs at neonatal endplates bound antibodies to gamma or delta, but not epsilon, subunit, whereas those in adult muscles bound antibodies to epsilon or delta, but not gamma, subunit. AChRs at denervated endplates and at developing endplates between postnatal days 9 and 16 bound all three antibodies. We conclude that the distribution of gamma and epsilon subunits of the AChR parallels the distribution of AChRs with embryonic and adult channel properties, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Alpha-conotoxins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
alpha-Conotoxins (alpha-CgTxs) are a family of Cys-enriched peptides found in several marine snails from the genus Conus. These small peptides behave pharmacologically as competitive antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The data indicate that (1) alpha-CgTxs are able to discriminate between muscle- and neuronal-type AChRs and even among distinct AChR subtypes; (2) the binding sites for alpha-CgTxs are located, like other cholinergic ligands, at the interface of alpha and non-alpha subunits (gamma, delta, and epsilon for the muscle-type AChR, and beta for several neuronal-type AChRs); (3) some alpha-CgTxs differentiate the high- from the low-affinity binding site found on either alpha/non-alpha subunit interface; and that (4) specific residues in the cholinergic binding site are energetically coupled with their corresponding pairs in the toxin stabilizing the alpha-CgTx-AChR complex. The alpha-CgTxs have proven to be excellent probes for studying the structure and function of the AChR family.  相似文献   

10.
The high affinity receptor for IgE (Fc epsilon RI) is present on mast cells and basophils, and the aggregation of IgE-occupied receptors by Ag is responsible for the release of allergic mediators. The Fc epsilon RI is composed of at least three different subunits, alpha, beta, and gamma, with the alpha subunit binding IgE. The series of biochemical events linking receptor aggregation to the release of mediators has not been fully delineated. As a step towards understanding these processes, and for the development of functional cell lines, we have transfected the human Fc epsilon RI alpha subunit into the rat mast cell line RBL 2H3. These human Fc epsilon RI alpha-transfected cell lines have been characterized with respect to the association of the human alpha subunit with endogenous rat beta and gamma subunits and the ability of aggregated Fc epsilon RI alpha subunits to mediate a variety of biochemical events. The signal transduction events monitored include phosphoinositide hydrolysis, Ca2+ mobilization, tyrosine phosphorylation, histamine release, and arachidonic acid metabolism. In all cases, the events mediated by aggregating human Fc epsilon RI alpha subunits were indistinguishable from those produced via the rat Fc epsilon RI alpha. These results demonstrate that the human Fc epsilon RI alpha subunit can functionally substitute for the rat Fc epsilon RI alpha subunit during signal transduction. The availability of this cell line will provide a means of evaluating potential Fc epsilon RI antagonists.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the mechanisms of assembly and transport to the cell surface of the mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in transiently transfected COS cells. In cells transfected with all four subunit cDNAs, AChR was expressed on the surface with properties resembling those seen in mouse muscle cells (Gu, Y., A. F. Franco, Jr., P.D. Gardner, J. B. Lansman, J. R. Forsayeth, and Z. W. Hall. 1990. Neuron. 5:147-157). When incomplete combinations of AChR subunits were expressed, surface binding of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin was not detected except in the case of alpha beta gamma which expressed less than 15% of that seen with all four subunits. Immunoprecipitation and sucrose gradient sedimentation experiments showed that in cells expressing pairs of subunits, alpha delta and alpha gamma heterodimers were formed, but alpha beta was not. When three subunits were expressed, alpha delta beta and alpha gamma beta complexes were formed. Variation of the ratios of the four subunit cDNAs used in the transfection mixture showed that surface AChR expression was decreased by high concentrations of delta or gamma cDNAs in a mutually competitive manner. High expression of delta or gamma subunits also each inhibited formation of a heterodimer with alpha and the other subunit. These results are consistent with a defined pathway for AChR assembly in which alpha delta and alpha gamma heterodimers are formed first, followed by association with the beta subunit and with each other to form the complete AChR.  相似文献   

12.
Escobar syndrome is a form of arthrogryposis multiplex congenita and features joint contractures, pterygia, and respiratory distress. Similar findings occur in newborns exposed to nicotinergic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibodies from myasthenic mothers. We performed linkage studies in families with Escobar syndrome and identified eight mutations within the gamma -subunit gene (CHRNG) of the AChR. Our functional studies show that gamma -subunit mutations prevent the correct localization of the fetal AChR in human embryonic kidney-cell membranes and that the expression pattern in prenatal mice corresponds to the human clinical phenotype. AChRs have five subunits. Two alpha, one beta, and one delta subunit are always present. By switching gamma to epsilon subunits in late fetal development, fetal AChRs are gradually replaced by adult AChRs. Fetal and adult AChRs are essential for neuromuscular signal transduction. In addition, the fetal AChRs seem to be the guide for the primary encounter of axon and muscle. Because of this important function in organogenesis, human mutations in the gamma subunit were thought to be lethal, as they are in gamma -knockout mice. In contrast, many mutations in other subunits have been found to be viable but cause postnatally persisting or beginning myasthenic syndromes. We conclude that Escobar syndrome is an inherited fetal myasthenic disease that also affects neuromuscular organogenesis. Because gamma expression is restricted to early development, patients have no myasthenic symptoms later in life. This is the major difference from mutations in the other AChR subunits and the striking parallel to the symptoms found in neonates with arthrogryposis when maternal AChR auto-antibodies crossed the placenta and caused the transient inactivation of the AChR pathway.  相似文献   

13.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is a ligand-gated ion channel found in muscles and neurons. Muscle AChR, formed by five homologous subunits (alpha2 beta gamma delta or alpha2 beta gamma epsilon), is the major antigen in the autoimmune disease, myasthenia gravis (MG), in which pathogenic autoantibodies bind to, and inactivate, the AChR. The extracellular domain (ECD) of the human muscle alpha subunit has been heterologously expressed and extensively studied. Our aim was to obtain satisfactory amounts of the ECDs of the non-alpha subunits of human muscle AChR for use as starting material for the determination of the 3D structure of the receptor ECDs and for the characterization of the specificities of antibodies in sera from patients with MG. We expressed the N-terminal ECDs of the beta (amino acids 1-221; beta1-221), gamma (amino acids 1-218; gamma1-218), and epsilon (amino acids 1-219; epsilon1-219) subunits of human muscle AChR in the yeast, Pichia pastoris. beta1-221 was expressed at approximately 2 mg.L(-1) culture, whereas gamma1-218 and epsilon1-219 were expressed at 0.3-0.8 mg.L(-1) culture. All three recombinant polypeptides were glycosylated and soluble; beta1-221 was mainly in an apparently dimeric form, whereas gamma1-218 and epsilon1-219 formed soluble oligomers. CD studies of beta1-221 suggested that it has considerable beta-sheet secondary structure with a proportion of alpha-helix. Conformation-dependent mAbs against the ECDs of the beta or gamma subunits specifically recognized beta1-221 or gamma1-218, respectively, and polyclonal rabbit antiserum raised against purified beta1-221 bound to (125)I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin-labeled human AChR. Moreover, immobilization of each ECD on Sepharose beads and incubation of the ECD-Sepharose matrices with MG sera caused a significant reduction in the concentrations of autoantibodies in the sera, showing specific binding to the recombinant ECDs. These results suggest that the expressed proteins present some near-native conformational features and are thus suitable for our purposes.  相似文献   

14.
Curariform alkaloids competitively inhibit muscle acetylcholine receptors (AChR) by bridging the alpha and non-alpha subunits that form the ligand-binding site. Here we delineate bound orientations of d-tubocurarine (d-TC) and its methylated derivative metocurine using mutagenesis, ligand binding measurements, and computational methods. When tested against a series of lysine mutations in the epsilon subunit, the two antagonists show marked differences in the consequences of the mutations on binding affinity. The mutations epsilon L117K, epsilon Y111K, and epsilon L109K decrease affinity of metocurine by up to 3 orders of magnitude but only slightly alter affinity of d-TC. At the alpha subunit face of the binding site, the mutation alpha Y198T decreases affinity of both antagonists, but alpha Y198F preferentially enhances affinity of d-TC. Computation of antagonist docking orientations, based on our structural model of the alpha-epsilon site of the human AChR, indicates distinct orientations of each antagonist; the flatter metocurine fits into a pocket formed principally by the epsilon subunit, whereas the more compact d-TC spans the narrower crevasse between alpha and epsilon subunits. The side chains of epsilon Tyr-111 and epsilon Thr-117 juxtapose one of two quaternary nitrogens in metocurine but are remote from the equivalent quaternary nitrogen in d-TC, which instead closely approaches alpha Tyr-198. The different docked orientations arise through tilt of the curariform scaffold by approximately 60 degrees normal to the nitrogen-nitrogen axis, together with a 20 degrees rotation about the axis. The overall mutagenesis and computational results show that despite their similar structures, d-TC and metocurine bind in distinctly different orientations to the adult human AChR.  相似文献   

15.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2601-2611
We have used fibroblast clones expressing muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha and gamma, and alpha and delta subunits to measure the kinetics of subunit assembly, and to study the properties of the partially assembled products that are formed. We demonstrate by coimmunoprecipitation that assembly intermediates in fibroblasts coexpressing alpha and delta subunits are formed in a time-dependent manner. The alpha and gamma- and the alpha and delta-producing transfected cells form complexes that, when labeled with 125I-alpha- bungarotoxin, migrate in sucrose gradients at 6.3S, a value consistent with a hetero-dimer structure. An additional peak at 8.5S is formed from the alpha and gamma subunits expressed in fibroblasts suggesting that gamma may have more than one binding site for alpha subunit. The stability and specificity of formation of these partially assembled complexes suggests that they are normal intermediates in the assembly of acetylcholine receptor. Comparison of the binding of 125I-alpha- bungarotoxin to intact and detergent-extracted fibroblasts indicate that essentially all of the binding sites are retained in an intracellular pool. The fibroblast delta subunit has the electrophoretic mobility in SDS-PAGE of a precursor that does not contain complex carbohydrates. In addition, alpha gamma and alpha delta complexes had lectin binding properties expected of subunits lacking complex oligosaccharides. Therefore, fibroblasts coexpressing alpha and gamma or alpha and delta subunits produce discrete assembly intermediates that are retained in an intracellular compartment and are not processed by Golgi enzymes.  相似文献   

16.
Acetylcholine receptor (AChR) gamma and epsilon subunits were tagged by green fluorescent protein (GFP) to analyse assembly and targeting in live muscle fibers at the neuromuscular junction. N- or C-terminal fusion polypeptides showed no fluorescence upon transfection of HEK cells. When GFP was inserted into the cytoplasmic loop connecting putative transmembrane regions M3 and M4, the gamma/GFP and epsilon/GFP subunits were fluorescent and formed together with the alpha, beta, and delta subunits GFP-tagged AChR complexes that were integrated into the plasma membrane. As the AChR were also clustered by rapsyn, the results indicate that the cytoplasmatic domains of the gamma and epsilon subunits may not be required for assembly and rapsyn-dependent clustering. The gamma/GFP and epsilon/GFP subunit-containing receptors were expressed in X. laevis oocytes and have affinities for acetylcholine similar to that of the wild-type receptors. Direct gene transfer into single muscle fibers reveals that gamma/GFP or epsilon/GFP polypeptides are expressed at the site of injection and are transported within the endoplasmatic reticulum. When reaching subsynaptic regions, both gamma/GFP or epsilon/GFP subunits compete with endogenous epsilon subunits to assemble GFP-tagged receptors, which are selectively targeted to the postsynaptic membrane.  相似文献   

17.
S Verrall  Z W Hall 《Cell》1992,68(1):23-31
Ligand-gated ion channels are oligomeric membrane proteins in which homologous subunits specifically recognize one another and assemble around an aqueous pore. To identify domains responsible for the specificity of subunit association, we used a dominant-negative assay in which truncated subunits of the mouse muscle acetylcholine receptor (AChR) were coexpressed with the four wild-type subunits in transfected COS cells. Fragments of the alpha, delta, and gamma subunits consisting solely of the extracellular N-terminal domain blocked surface expression of the AChR and the formation of alpha delta heterodimers, an early step in the assembly pathway of the AChR. Immunoprecipitation and sucrose gradient sedimentation experiments showed that an N-terminal fragment of the alpha subunit forms a specific complex with the intact delta subunit. Thus the extracellular N-terminal domain of the alpha, delta, and gamma subunits contains the information necessary for specific subunit association.  相似文献   

18.
By defining functional defects in a congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS), we show that two mutant residues, located in a binding site region of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) epsilon subunit, exert opposite effects on ACh binding and suppress channel gating. Single channel kinetic analysis reveals that the first mutation, epsilon N182Y, increases ACh affinity for receptors in the resting closed state, which promotes sequential occupancy of the binding sites and discloses rate constants for ACh occupancy of the nonmutant alphadelta site. Studies of the analogous mutation in the delta subunit, deltaN187Y, disclose rate constants for ACh occupancy of the nonmutant alpha epsilon site. The second CMS mutation, epsilon D175N, reduces ACh affinity for receptors in the resting closed state; occupancy of the mutant site still promotes gating because a large difference in affinity is maintained between closed and open states. epsilon D175N impairs overall gating, however, through an effect independent of ACh occupancy. When mapped on a structural model of the AChR binding site, epsilon N182Y localizes to the interface with the alpha subunit, and epsilon D175 to the entrance of the ACh binding cavity. Both epsilon N182Y and epsilon D175 show state specificity in affecting closed relative to desensitized state affinities, suggesting that the protein chain harboring epsilon N182 and epsilon D175 rearranges in the course of receptor desensitization. The overall results show that key residues at the ACh binding site differentially stabilize the agonist bound to closed, open and desensitized states, and provide a set point for gating of the channel.  相似文献   

19.
Identification of all residues involved in the recognition and binding of cholinergic ligands (e.g. agonists, competitive antagonists, and noncompetitive agonists) is a primary objective to understand which structural components are related to the physiological function of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The picture for the localization of the agonist/competitive antagonist binding sites is now clearer in the light of newer and better experimental evidence. These sites are located mainly on both alpha subunits in a pocket approximately 30-35 A above the surface membrane. Since both alpha subunits are identical, the observed high and low affinity for different ligands on the receptor is conditioned by the interaction of the alpha subunit with other non-alpha subunits. This molecular interaction takes place at the interface formed by the different subunits. For example, the high-affinity acetylcholine (ACh) binding site of the muscle-type AChR is located on the alphadelta subunit interface, whereas the low-affinity ACh binding site is located on the alphagamma subunit interface. Regarding homomeric AChRs (e.g. alpha7, alpha8, and alpha9), up to five binding sites may be located on the alphaalpha subunit interfaces. From the point of view of subunit arrangement, the gamma subunit is in between both alpha subunits and the delta subunit follows the alpha aligned in a clockwise manner from the gamma. Although some competitive antagonists such as lophotoxin and alpha-bungarotoxin bind to the same high- and low-affinity sites as ACh, other cholinergic drugs may bind with opposite specificity. For instance, the location of the high- and the low-affinity binding site for curare-related drugs as well as for agonists such as the alkaloid nicotine and the potent analgesic epibatidine (only when the AChR is in the desensitized state) is determined by the alphagamma and the alphadelta subunit interface, respectively. The case of alpha-conotoxins (alpha-CoTxs) is unique since each alpha-CoTx from different species is recognized by a specific AChR type. In addition, the specificity of alpha-CoTxs for each subunit interface is species-dependent.In general terms we may state that both alpha subunits carry the principal component for the agonist/competitive antagonist binding sites, whereas the non-alpha subunits bear the complementary component. Concerning homomeric AChRs, both the principal and the complementary component exist on the alpha subunit. The principal component on the muscle-type AChR involves three loops-forming binding domains (loops A-C). Loop A (from mouse sequence) is mainly formed by residue Y(93), loop B is molded by amino acids W(149), Y(152), and probably G(153), while loop C is shaped by residues Y(190), C(192), C(193), and Y(198). The complementary component corresponding to each non-alpha subunit probably contributes with at least four loops. More specifically, the loops at the gamma subunit are: loop D which is formed by residue K(34), loop E that is designed by W(55) and E(57), loop F which is built by a stretch of amino acids comprising L(109), S(111), C(115), I(116), and Y(117), and finally loop G that is shaped by F(172) and by the negatively-charged amino acids D(174) and E(183). The complementary component on the delta subunit, which corresponds to the high-affinity ACh binding site, is formed by homologous loops. Regarding alpha-neurotoxins, several snake and alpha-CoTxs bear specific residues that are energetically coupled with their corresponding pairs on the AChR binding site. The principal component for snake alpha-neurotoxins is located on the residue sequence alpha1W(184)-D(200), which includes loop C. In addition, amino acid sequence 55-74 from the alpha1 subunit (which includes loop E), and residues gammaL(119) (close to loop F) and gammaE(176) (close to loop G) at the low-affinity binding site, or deltaL(121) (close to the homologous region of loop G) at the high-affinity binding site, are i  相似文献   

20.
Y Gu  P Camacho  P Gardner  Z W Hall 《Neuron》1991,6(6):879-887
We have used a species difference in epsilon subunits of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) to investigate regions of the subunit protein that are important in receptor assembly. Upon transient transfection of COS cells, mouse epsilon subunit cDNA is approximately 10 times more effective than that of the rat in supporting expression of surface AChRs when the other subunits are from either mouse or rat. In cells transfected with only alpha and epsilon subunit cDNAs, the formation of an alpha epsilon heterodimer, a presumed assembly intermediate, is also less efficient with rat than with mouse epsilon subunit. By site-directed mutagenesis, we have found that these differences can be accounted for by 2 amino acid differences in the N-terminal domain at positions 106 and 115 of the rat and mouse epsilon subunits, suggesting that the region near these 2 amino acid residues is important for AChR assembly.  相似文献   

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