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1.
Preincubation of receptor-rich membrane fragments from Torpedo marmorata with tertiary amine local anesthetics and several toxins such as histrionicotoxin, crotoxin and cerulotoxin, modifies the amplitude and time course of the relaxation processes monitored upon rapid mixing of the membrane fragments with the fluorescent agonist, Dns-C6-Cho. In particular, the amplitude of the rapid relaxation process, which is proportional to the fraction of acetylcholine receptor sites in a high-affinity state, increases; accordingly, the rate constant of the 'slow' and 'intermediate' relaxation processes also increases up to ten times (except with histrionicotoxin) whereas in a higher range of local anesthetic concentrations the rate constant of the 'rapid' relaxation process decreases. The data are accounted for by a two-state model of the acetylcholine regulator, assuming distinct binding sites for cholinergic agonists and local anesthetics and allosteric interactions between these two classes of sites; local anesthetics stabilize the regulator in a high-affinity state for agonists even in the absence of agonist, and modify the rate constants for th interconversions between the low-affinity and high-affinity states. The model accounts for the 'slow' fluorescence increase monitored upon addition of local anesthetics to a suspension of receptor-rich membranes supplemented with trace amounts of Dns-C6-Cho. The effect of local anesthetics on the apparent rate constant of the 'rapid' relaxation process can be accounted for on the basis of an additional low-affinity binding of local anesthetics to the acetylcholine receptor site. Finally the increase of the apparent rate constant of the 'intermediate' relaxation process can be simply accounted for by assuming the existence of a third state, corresponding to the 'active' state, to which local anesthetics bind and block ionic transport.  相似文献   

2.
R J Lukas  H Morimoto  E L Bennett 《Biochemistry》1979,18(11):2384-2395
Agonist-binding affinities of central nervous system nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAcChR) are sensitive to the duration of exposure to agonist. These agonist-induced changes in receptor state may be mimicked by appropriate modification of receptor thio groups and/or by manipulation of solvent ionic composition. In the absence of Ca2+, the concentration of acetylcholine (AcCh) necessary to prevent half of specific 3H-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin binding is approximately 1 mM for nAcChR treated with dithiothreitol (DTT) or DTT-N-ethylmaleimide (low-affinity states) and approximately 40 microM for nAcChR treated with DTT-5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) or for native nAcChR pretreated with AcCh (high-affinity states). Addition of Ca2+ results in an increase in the effectiveness of AcCh toward blocking toxin binding. None of these treatments alters toxin or antagonist binding nor are there observed differences in Hill numbers for agonist binding. Agonists competitively inhibit toxin binding to low-affinity states, but noncompetitive inhibition is observed for binding to high-affinity states. Values of AcCh dissociation constants estimated from these data fall within the range of values determined physiologically with nAcChR from other systems. The data indicate that the redox state of brain nAcChR thio groups and Ca2+ may mediate physiologically important changes in the receptor state during activation and desensitization.  相似文献   

3.
We have studied the interaction of the reversible acetylcholine esterase inhibitor (-)physostigmine (D-eserine) with the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) from Torpedo marmorata electric tissue by means of ligand-induced ion flux into nAChR-rich membrane vesicles and of equilibrium binding. We find that (-) physostigmine induces cation flux (and also binds to the receptor) even in the presence of saturating concentrations of antagonists of acetylcholine, such as D-tubocurarine, alpha-bungarotoxin or antibody WF6. The direct action on the acetylcholine receptor is not affected by removal of the methylcarbamate function from the drug and thus is not due to carbamylation of the receptor. Antibodies FK1 and benzoquinonium antagonize channel activation (and binding) of eserine, suggesting that the eserine binding site(s) is separate from, but adjacent to, the acetylcholine binding site at the receptor. In addition to the channel activating site(s) with an affinity of binding in the 50 microM range, there exists a further class of low-affinity (Kd approximately mM) sites from which eserine acts as a direct blocker of the acetylcholine-activated channel. Our results suggest the existence of a second pathway of activation of the nAChR channel.  相似文献   

4.
Kawai H  Cao L  Dunn SM  Dryden WF  Raftery MA 《Biochemistry》2000,39(14):3867-3876
The binding of the semirigid agonist [(3)H]arecolone methiodide to the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor has been correlated with its functional properties measured both in flux studies with Torpedo membrane vesicles and by single-channel analysis after reconstitution in giant liposomes. Under both equilibrium and preequilibrium conditions, the binding of arecolone methiodide is similar to that of other agonists such as acetylcholine. At equilibrium, it binds to two sites per receptor with high affinity (K(d) = 99 +/- 12 nM), and studies of its dissociation kinetics suggest that each of these sites is made up of two subsites that are mutually exclusive at equilibrium. The kinetics of arecolone methiodide binding were monitored by the changes in the receptor intrinsic fluorescence, and the data are consistent with a model in which the initial binding event is followed by sequential conformational transitions of the receptor-ligand complex. In flux studies, arecolone methiodide was approximately 3-fold more potent (EC(50) = 31 +/- 5 microM) than acetylcholine but its maximum flux rate was 4-10-fold lower. This phenomenon has been studied further by single-channel analysis of Torpedo receptors reconstituted in giant liposomes. Whereas the flexible agonist carbamylcholine (5 microM) was shown to induce channels with conductances of 56 and 34 pS with approximately equal frequency, arecolone methiodide (2 microM) preferentially induced the channel of lower conductance. These results are interpreted in terms of a simple model in which the rigidity of arecolone methiodide restrains the conformation that the receptor-ligand complex can adopt, thus favoring the lower conductance state.  相似文献   

5.
Agonist-binding kinetics to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) from Torpedo californica were measured using sequential-mixing stopped-flow fluorescence methods to determine the contribution of each individual site to agonist-induced opening and desensitization. Timed dansyl-C6-choline (DC6C) binding followed by its dissociation upon mixing with high, competing agonist concentrations revealed four kinetic components: an initial, fast fluorescence decay, followed by a transient increase, and then two characteristic decays that reflect dissociation from the desensitized agonist sites. The transient increase resulted from DC6C binding to the open-channel based on its prevention by proadifen, a noncompetitive antagonist. Further characterization of DC6C channel binding by the inhibition of [3H]phencyclidine binding and by equilibrium measurements of DC6C fluorescence yielded KD values of 2-4 microM for the desensitized AChR and approximately 600 microM for the closed state. At this site, DC6C displayed a strongly blue-shifted emission spectrum, higher intrinsic fluorescence, and weaker energy transfer from tryptophans than when bound to either agonist site. The initial, fast fluorescence decay was assigned to DC6C dissociation from the alphadelta site of the AChR in its closed conformation, on the basis of inhibition with the site-selective antagonists d-tubocurarine and alpha-conotoxin MI. Fast decay amplitude data indicated an apparent affinity of 0.9 microM for the closed-state alphadelta site; the closed-state alphagamma-site affinity is inferred to be near 100 microM. These values and the known affinities for the desensitized conformation show that the alphagamma site drives AChR desensitization to a approximately 40-fold greater extent than the alphadelta site, undergoes energetically larger conformational changes, and is the primary determinant of agonist potency.  相似文献   

6.
The binding of agonists and antagonists to muscarinic acetylcholine receptors on intact cultured cardiac cells has been compared with the binding observed in homogenized membrane preparations. The antagonists [3H]quinuclidinyl benzilate and [3H]N-methylscopolamine bind to a single class of receptor sites on intact cells with affinities similar to those seen in membrane preparations. In contrast with the heterogeneity of agonist binding sites observed in membrane preparations, the agonist carbachol binds to a homogeneous class of low-affinity sites on intact cells with an affinity identical to that found for the low-affinity agonist site in membrane preparations in the presence of guanyl nucleotides. Kinetic studies of antagonist binding to receptors in the absence and presence of agonist did not provide evidence for the existence of a transient (greater than 30 s) high-affinity agonist site that was subsequently converted to a site of lower affinity. Nathanson N. M. Binding of agonists and antagonists to muscarinic acetylcholine receptors on intact cultured heart cells.  相似文献   

7.
The role of the hypothalamic tripeptide L-prolyl-L-leucyl-glycinamide (PLG) in modulating the agonist binding to bovine striatal dopamine D2 receptor was investigated using a selective high-affinity agonist, n-propylnorapomorphine (NPA). PLG caused an enhancement in [3H]NPA binding in striatal membranes in a dose-dependent manner, the maximum effect being observed at 10(-7)-10(-6) M concentration of the tripeptide. The Scatchard analysis of [3H]NPA binding to membranes preincubated with 10(-6) M PLG revealed a significant increase in the affinity of the agonist binding sites. In contrast, there was no effect of PLG on the binding pattern of the antagonist [3H]spiroperidol. The antagonist versus agonist competition curves analyzed for agonist high- and low-affinity states of the receptor displayed an increase in the population and affinity of the high-affinity form of the receptor with PLG treatment. The low-affinity sites concomitantly decreased with relatively small change in the affinity for the agonists. Almost similar results were obtained when either NPA or apomorphine was used in the competition experiments. A partial antagonistic effect of PLG on 5'-guanylylimidodiphosphate [Gpp(NH)p]-induced inhibition of high-affinity agonist binding was also observed, as the ratio of high- to low-affinity forms of the receptor was significantly higher in the PLG-treated membranes compared to the controls. Direct [3H]NPA binding experiments demonstrated that PLG attenuated the Gpp(NH)p-induced inhibition of agonist binding by increasing the EC50 of the nucleotide (concentration that inhibits 50% of the specific binding). No effect of PLG on high-affinity [3H]NPA binding, however, could be observed when the striatal membranes were preincubated with Gpp(NH)p.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
M W Agey  S M Dunn 《Biochemistry》1989,28(10):4200-4208
The binding of the GABA receptor agonist [3H]muscimol to membrane preparations from bovine cerebral cortex has been investigated in equilibrium and kinetic experiments. Equilibrium binding curves are biphasic and suggest that [3H]muscimol binds to both high-affinity (Kd approximately 10 nM) and low-affinity (Kd approximately 0.5 microM) sites. Binding to each class of sites is inhibited by GABA and by the specific GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline. The kinetics of [3H]muscimol binding have been measured by using both manual filtration assays and an automated rapid filtration technique which permits the measurement of ligand dissociation on subsecond time scales. Association and dissociation curves are biphasic at all concentrations of [3H]muscimol studied, even under conditions of low receptor saturation when no significant occupancy of the low-affinity sites would be expected. These results cannot be simply explained by the presence of two populations of binding sites in the membrane preparations but suggest the existence of two forms of the monoliganded receptor. Dissociation constants for these two forms have been estimated to be 16 and 82 nM at 23 degrees C. At higher ligand concentrations, kinetic measurements have suggested that the binding of [3H]muscimol to low-affinity sites is accompanied by a slow conformational change of the receptor-ligand complex.  相似文献   

9.
In receptor-rich membrane fragments from Torpedo, acetylcholine binds, in the presence of 70 muM Tetram, to a homogeneous population of high-affinity sites with Kd = (3.4 +/- 0.8) x 10(08) M. Dissolution of these membrane fragments by sodium cholate causes a decrease of affinity associated with the appearance of medium-affinity (Kd approximately 10(-7) M) and low-affinity (Kd greater than or equal to 10(-6) M) sites. Dissolution by neutral detergents Triton X-100 or Emulphogene preserves the high affinity of the acetylcholine binding sites. In all the soluble states of the receptor protein, Ca2+ ions and local anaesthetics no longer enhance the affinity for acetylcholine. Elimination of sodium cholate by dilution leads to the reassociation of the receptor protein, the recovery of high-affinity sites and the control by Ca2+ ions and local anaesthetics. Purification by affinity chromatography of the receptor protein in Triton X-100 is accompanied by a conversion of a majority of the acetylcholine sites into their state of low affinity. High-affinity sites can no longer be recovered by detergent dilution from these low-affinity ones.  相似文献   

10.
The ryanodine receptor of rabbit skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum was purified by immunoaffinity chromatography as a single approximately 450,000-Da polypeptide and it was shown to mediate single channel activity identical to that of the ryanodine-treated Ca2+ release channel of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. The purified receptor had a [3H]ryanodine binding capacity (Bmax) of 280 pmol/mg and a binding affinity (Kd) of 9.0 nM. [3H]Ryanodine binding to the purified receptor was stimulated by ATP and Ca2+ with a half-maximal stimulation at 1 mM and 8-9 microM, respectively. [3H]Ryanodine binding to the purified receptor was inhibited by ruthenium red and high concentrations of Ca2+ with an IC50 of 2.5 microM and greater than 1 mM, respectively. Reconstitution of the purified receptor in planar lipid bilayers revealed the Ca2+ channel activity of the purified receptor. Like the native sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ channels treated with ryanodine, the purified receptor channels were characterized by (i) the predominance of long open states insensitive to Mg2+ and ruthenium red, (ii) a main slope conductance of approximately 35 pS and a less frequent 22 pS substate in 54 mM trans-Ca2+ or Ba2+, and (iii) a permeability ratio PBa or PCa/PTris = 8.7. The approximately 450,000-Da ryanodine receptor channel thus represents the long-term open "ryanodine-altered" state of the Ca2+ release channel from sarcoplasmic reticulum. We propose that the ryanodine receptor constitutes the physical pore that mediates Ca2+ release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle.  相似文献   

11.
Although agonists and competitive antagonists presumably occupy overlapping binding sites on ligand-gated channels, these interactions cannot be identical because agonists cause channel opening whereas antagonists do not. One explanation is that only agonist binding performs enough work on the receptor to cause the conformational changes that lead to gating. This idea is supported by agonist binding rates at GABA(A) and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors that are slower than expected for a diffusion-limited process, suggesting that agonist binding involves an energy-requiring event. This hypothesis predicts that competitive antagonist binding should require less activation energy than agonist binding. To test this idea, we developed a novel deconvolution-based method to compare binding and unbinding kinetics of GABA(A) receptor agonists and antagonists in outside-out patches from rat hippocampal neurons. Agonist and antagonist unbinding rates were steeply correlated with affinity. Unlike the agonists, three of the four antagonists tested had binding rates that were fast, independent of affinity, and could be accounted for by diffusion- and dehydration-limited processes. In contrast, agonist binding involved additional energy-requiring steps, consistent with the idea that channel gating is initiated by agonist-triggered movements within the ligand binding site. Antagonist binding does not appear to produce such movements, and may in fact prevent them.  相似文献   

12.
Specific binding characteristics of acetylcholine receptors at the diaphragm neuromuscular junction of rats aged 10 (mature adult) and 28 (aged) months were assayed by measuring 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Maximal binding to intact tissue samples was greater in the older rats; this could be attributed to an age-related increase in terminal branching. The toxin concentration at which half-maximal binding occurred increased in the older rats. Binding kinetics were assayed in finely minced tissue samples, and the association rate constant was observed to decrease in the 28-month animals. Retardation of the initial rate of toxin binding by d-tubocurarine (dTC) in minced tissue was described by a two-component nonlinear Hofstee plot; IC50 values (7.1-7.2 microM and 39.0-46.5 nM) were about the same for both age groups, but there was a significant shift toward the low-affinity values in the aged rats. Rhodamine-conjugated alpha-bungarotoxin was used to visualize receptor localization. There were no major changes in receptor distribution, and nerve terminals were consistently associated with receptors and vice versa. The data indicate a shift toward lower binding affinity during aging, which may involve changes either in one of the two toxin-binding sites on individual receptors, in dTC blocking of the channel moiety, or in receptor types.  相似文献   

13.
The development of cholinergic synapses in the rat olfactory bulb was investigated by measuring changes in the activity of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT; EC 2.3.1.6.), a presynaptic cholinergic marker, and in the concentration of muscarinic receptors, components of cholinoceptive membranes. Three biochemical properties of the muscarinic system also were examined for possible differentiation: ligand binding, molecular weight, and isoelectric point. Receptors from embryonic (day 18), neonatal (postnatal day 3), and adult rat olfactory bulbs exhibited identical complex binding (nH = 0.45) of the agonist carbachol. For each age, the relative proportions of high-affinity (Ki approximately equal to 1.0 microM) and low-affinity (Ki approximately equal to 100 microM) binding states were 60% and 40%, respectively. The antagonist pirenzepine also bound to high-affinity (Ki approximately equal to 0.15 microM, RH approximately equal to 70%) and low-affinity (Ki approximately equal to 2.0 microM, RL approximately equal to 30%) sites in neonatal and adult rats. Sodium dodecyl sulfate/urea-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of [3H]propylbenzilylcholine mustard-labeled receptors from neonatal and adult rats showed a single electrophoretic form with an apparent molecular weight of 65,000. In contrast, analytical isoelectric focusing indicated high pI (4.50) and low pI (4.00) receptor forms were present. Neonatal rats contained approximately equal proportions of the two receptor forms, whereas adult rats contained mainly the low pI form, indicating that molecular alteration of the receptor population had occurred during development. Comparison of postnatal changes in acetylcholine receptors and ChAT activity showed a striking correlation between the development of cholinergic terminals and muscarinic receptors. Throughout the first postnatal week, ChAT activity remained at 5% of adult levels; activity began to rise on postnatal day 6 and gradually reached adult levels (56 +/- 4 mumol of [3H]acetylcholine/h/g) during the fourth week. Similarly, muscarinic receptor concentration was low (30-50 fmol/mg) throughout the first week, began to rise at postnatal day 7; and reached 90% of adult levels (317 +/- 17 fmol/mg) by the fourth week. In contrast, there was little increase in the concentration of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (30 fmol/mg) during this period. The parallel postnatal development of ChAT activity and muscarinic receptors suggests the existence of factors that couple the differentiation of presynaptic cholinergic terminals and postsynaptic cholinoceptive elements.  相似文献   

14.
Under equilibrium conditions, the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo electroplax carries two high affinity-binding sites for agonists. It is generally assumed that these are the only agonist sites on the receptor and that their occupancy results in rapid channel activation followed by slower conformational transitions that lead to the high affinity equilibrium state. These slow transitions are thought to reflect the physiological process of desensitization. Here we show that preequilibration of the high affinity sites with saturating concentrations of carbamylcholine does not diminish the ion flux response to subsequent exposure to higher (activating) concentrations of this agonist. This finding has profound implications with respect to receptor function: (1) occupancy of the high affinity sites per se does not desensitize the receptor and (2) these sites cannot be directly involved in receptor activation. It is thus necessary to invoke the presence of additional binding sites in channel opening.  相似文献   

15.
The alpha 2 adrenergic receptor (AR) inhibits adenylate cyclase via an interaction with Ni, a guanine nucleotide binding protein. The early steps involved in the activation of the alpha 2 AR by agonists and the subsequent interaction with Ni are poorly understood. In order to better characterize these processes, we have studied the kinetics of ligand binding to the alpha 2 AR in human platelet membranes on the second time scale. Binding of the alpha 2 antagonist [3H]yohimbine was formally consistent with a simple bimolecular reaction mechanism with an association rate constant of 2.5 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 and a dissociation rate constant of 1.11 X 10(-3) s-1. The low association rate constant suggests that this is not a diffusion-limited reaction. Equilibrium binding of the alpha 2 adrenergic full agonist [3H]UK 14,304 was characterized by two binding affinities: Kd1 = 0.3-0.6 nM and Kd2 = 10 nM. The high-affinity binding corresponds to approximately 65% and the low-affinity binding to 35% of the total binding. The kinetics of binding of [3H]UK 14,304 were complex and not consistent with a mass action interaction at one or more independent binding sites. The dependence of the kinetics on [3H]UK 14,304 concentration revealed a fast phase with an apparent bimolecular reaction constant kappa + of 5 X 10(6) M-1 s-1. The rate constants and amplitudes of the slow phase of agonist binding were relatively independent of ligand concentration. These results were analyzed quantitatively according to several variants of the "ternary complex" binding mechanism. In the model which best accounted for the data, (1) approximately one-third of the alpha 2 adrenergic receptor binds agonist with low affinity and is unable to couple with a guanine nucleotide binding protein (N protein), (2) approximately one-third is coupled to the N protein prior to agonist binding, and (3) the remainder interacts by a diffusional coupling of the alpha 2 AR with the N protein or a slow, ligand-independent conformational change of the alpha 2 AR-N protein complex. The rates of interaction of liganded and unliganded receptor with N protein are estimated.  相似文献   

16.
Local anesthetics and other noncompetitive inhibitors (NCIs) of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, acting at sites other than the acetylcholine-binding sites, block channel opening and/or cation translation through the open channel. In order to characterize the NCI sites and to decide among possible mechanisms of NCI action, we have photolabeled the receptor in membrane from Torpedo electric tissue with the photolyzable NCI [3H]quinacrine azide ([3H]QA), using a continuous-flow, rapid-mixing device and millisecond-duration irradiation. Membrane, [3H]QA, and effectors were mixed, and, after delay times of 20 ms or greater, the mixture was irradiated for 2 ms, quenched, and collected. Brief exposure of the receptor to acetylcholine, but not to hexamethonium or d-tubocurarine, induced a state particularly susceptible to photoincorporation of [3H]QA. This acetylcholine-induced photoincorporation was exclusively into the alpha and beta chains of the receptor, peaked at 100-ms delay time, declined to 15% of maximum after delay times of minutes, and was blocked by the NCIs proadifen and histrionicotoxin. At 20-ms delay, the dependence of labeling by 2 microM [3H]QA on acetylcholine concentration was characterized by an apparent dissociation constant of about 15 microM and a Hill coefficient of 1. The kinetics of the development of susceptibility to photolabeling and the apparent lack of positive cooperativity in the effect of acetylcholine on this development suggest that the preferentially photolabeled state is a transient, rapidly developing, desensitized state, rather than an open-channel state.  相似文献   

17.
3,4-Dihydroxyphenylethylamine (dopamine) D2 receptors, solubilized from bovine striatal membranes using a cholic acid-NaCl combination, exhibited the typical pharmacological characteristics of both agonist and antagonist binding. The rank order potency of the agonists and antagonists to displace [3H]spiroperidol binding was the same as that observed with membrane-bound receptors. Computer-assisted analysis of the [3H]spiroperidol/agonist competition curves revealed the retention of high- and low-affinity states of the D2 receptor in the solubilized preparations and the proportions of receptor subpopulations in the two affinity states were similar to those reported in membrane. Guanine nucleotide almost completely converted the high-affinity sites to low-affinity sites for the agonists. The binding of the high-affinity agonist [3H]N-n-propylnorapomorphine ([3H]NPA) was clearly demonstrated in the solubilized preparations for the first time. Addition of guanylyl-imidodiphosphate completely abolished the [3H]NPA binding. When the solubilized receptors were subjected to diethylaminoethyl-Sephacel chromatography, the dopaminergic binding sites eluted in two distinct peaks, showing six- to sevenfold purification of the receptors in the major peak. Binding studies performed on both peaks indicated that the receptor subpopulation present in the first peak may have a larger proportion of high-affinity binding sites than the second peak. The solubilized preparation also showed high-affinity binding of [35S]guanosine-5'-(gamma-thio)triphosphate, a result suggesting the presence of guanine nucleotide binding sites, which may interact with the solubilized D2 receptors. These data are consistent with the retention of the D2 receptor-guanine nucleotide regulatory protein complex in the solubilized preparations and should provide a suitable model system to study the receptor-effector interactions.  相似文献   

18.
We compared the main properties of human recombinant alpha3beta4beta3 neuronal nicotinic receptors with those of alpha3beta4 receptors, expressed in Xenopus oocytes. beta3 incorporation decreased the channel mean open time (from 5.61 to 1.14 ms, after approximate correction for missed gaps) and burst length. There was also an increase in single channel slope conductance from 28.8 picosiemens (alpha3beta4) to 46.7 picosiemens (alpha3beta4beta3; in low divalent external solution). On the other hand, the calcium permeability (determined by a reversal potential method in chloride-depleted oocytes) and the pharmacological properties of beta3-containing receptors differed little from those of alpha3beta4. The main pharmacological difference in alpha3beta4beta3 "triplet" receptors was a 3-fold decrease in the potency of lobeline relative to acetylcholine. Nevertheless, there was no change in the rank order of potency for agonists (epibatidine > lobeline > cytisine, 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium iodide, nicotine > acetylcholine > carbachol for both receptors; measured at low agonist concentrations). Sensitivity to the competitive antagonists trimetaphan (0.2-1 microM) and dihydro-beta-erythroidine (30 microM) was similar for the two combinations, with a Schild KB for trimetaphan of 76 and 66 nM on alpha3beta4 and alpha3beta4beta3, respectively. The change in single channel conductance confirms that beta3 replaces a beta4 subunit in the pentamer. The absence of pronounced differences in the pharmacological profile of the triplet receptor argues against a role for the beta3 subunit in the formation of agonist binding sites, whereas the changes in channel kinetics suggest an important effect on receptor gating. The shortening of the burst length of beta3-containing receptors implies that any synaptic currents mediated by such channels would have faster decay kinetics.  相似文献   

19.
Short-term receptor regulation by agonists is a well-known phenomenon for a number of receptors, including beta-adrenergic receptors, and has been associated with receptor changes revealed by radioligand binding. In the present study, we investigated the rapid changes in alpha 1-adrenergic receptors induced by agonists. alpha 1-receptors were studied on DDT1 MF-2 smooth muscle cells (DDT1-MF-2 cells) by specific [3H]prazosin binding. In competition binding on membranes and on intact cells at 4 degrees C or at 37 degrees C in 1-min assays, agonists competed for a single class of sites with relatively high affinity. By contrast, in equilibrium binding at 37 degrees C on intact cells agonists competed with two receptor forms (high- and low-affinity). We quantified the receptors in the high-affinity form by measuring the [3H]prazosin binding inhibited by 20 microM norepinephrine (this concentration selectively saturated the high-affinity sites). The low-affinity sites were measured by subtracting the binding of [3H]prazosin to the high-affinity sites from the total specific binding. High-affinity receptors were 85% of the total sites in binding experiments at 4 degrees C, but only 30% at 37 degrees C. On DDT1-MF-2 cells preequilibrated with [3H]prazosin at 4 degrees C, and then shifted to 37 degrees C for a few minutes, norepinephrine selectively reduced the high-affinity sites by 30%. We suggest that at 4 degrees C it is the native form of alpha 1-receptors that is measured, with most of the sites in the high-affinity form, while during incubation at 37 degrees C the norepinephrine present in the binding assay converts most of the receptors to an apparent low-affinity form, so that they are no longer recognized by 20 microM norepinephrine. The nature of this low-affinity form was further investigated. On DDT1-MF-2 cells preincubated with the agonist and then extensively washed at 4 degrees C (to maintain the receptor changes induced by the agonist) the number of receptors recognized by [3H]prazosin at 4 degrees C was reduced by 38%. After fragmentation of the cells, the number of receptors measured at 4 degrees C was the same in control and norepinephrine-treated cells, suggesting that the disruption of cellular integrity might expose the receptors which are probably sequestered after agonist treatment. In conclusion, the appearance of the low affinity for agonists at 37 degrees C may be due to the agonist-induced sequestration of alpha 1-adrenergic receptors, resulting in a limited accessibility to hydrophilic ligands.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied putative nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the optic lobe of the newborn chick, using 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin, a specific blocker of acetylcholine receptors in the neuromuscular junction, and [3H]acetylcholine, a ligand which in the presence of atropine selectively labels binding sites of nicotinic character in rat brain cortex (Schwartz et al., 1982). [3H]Acetylcholine binds reversibly to a single class of high affinity binding sites (KD = 2.2 X 10(-8) M) which occur at a tissue concentration of 5.7 pmol/g. A large fraction (approximately 60%) of these binding sites is solubilized by Triton X-100, sodium cholate, or the zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate. Solubilization increases the affinity for acetylcholine and several nicotinic drugs from 1.5- to 7-fold. The acetylcholine-binding macromolecule resembles the receptor for alpha-bungarotoxin present in the same tissue with respect to subcellular distribution, hydrodynamic properties, lectin binding, and agonist affinity rank order. It differs from the toxin receptor in affinity for nicotinic antagonists, sensitivity to thermal inactivation, and regional distribution. The solubilized [3H]acetylcholine binding activity is separated from the toxin receptor by incubation with agarose-linked acetylcholine, by affinity chromatography on immobilized Naja naja siamensis alpha-toxin, and by precipitation with a monoclonal antibody to chick optic lobe toxin receptor.  相似文献   

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