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1.
The relationship between neuronal alpha-bungarotoxin binding proteins (alpha BGTBPs) and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor function in the brain of higher vertebrates has remained controversial for over a decade. Recently, the cDNAs for two homologous putative ligand binding subunits, designated alpha BGTBP alpha 1 and alpha BGTBP alpha 2, have been isolated on the basis of their homology to the N terminus of an alpha BGTBP purified from chick brain. In the present study, a panel of overlapping synthetic peptides corresponding to the complete chick brain alpha BGTBP alpha 1 subunit and residues 166-215 of the alpha BGTBP alpha 2 subunits were tested for their ability to bind 125I-alpha BGT. The sequence segments corresponding to alpha BGTBP alpha 1-(181-200) and alpha BGTBP alpha 2-(181-200) were found to consistently and specifically bind 125I-alpha BGT. The ability of these peptides to bind alpha BGT was significantly decreased by reduction and alkylation of the Cys residues at positions 190/191, whereas oxidation had little effect on alpha BGT binding activity. The relative affinities for alpha BGT of the peptide sequences alpha BGTBP alpha 1-(181-200) and alpha BGTBP alpha 2-(181-200) were compared with those of peptides corresponding to the sequence segments Torpedo alpha 1-(181-200) and chick muscle alpha 1-(179-198). In competition assays, the IC50 for alpha BGTBP alpha 1-(181-200) was 20-fold higher than that obtained for the other peptides (approximately 2 versus 40 microM). These results indicate that alpha BGTBP alpha 1 and alpha BGTBP alpha 2 are ligand binding subunits able to bind alpha BGT at sites homologous with nAChR alpha subunits and that these subunits may confer differential ligand binding properties on the two alpha BGTBP subtypes of which they are components.  相似文献   

2.
Previous studies by several laboratories have identified a narrow sequence region of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha subunit, flanking the cysteinyl residues at positions 192 and 193, as containing major elements of, if not all, the binding site for cholinergic ligands. In the present study, we used a panel of synthetic peptides as representative structural elements of the AChR to investigate whether additional segments of the AChR sequences are able to bind alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) and several alpha-BTX-competitive monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). The mAbs used (WF6, WF5, and W2) were raised against native Torpedo AChR, specifically recognize the alpha subunit, and bind to AChR is inhibited by all cholinergic ligands. WF6 competes with agonists, but not with low mol. wt. antagonists, for AChR binding. The synthetic peptides used in this study were approximately 20 residue long, overlapped each other by 4-6 residues, and corresponded to the complete sequence of Torpedo AChR alpha subunit. Also, overlapping peptides, corresponding to the sequence segments of each Torpedo AChR subunit homologous to alpha 166-203, were synthesized. alpha-BTX bound to a peptide containing the sequence alpha 181-200 and also, albeit to a lesser extent, to a peptide containing the sequence alpha 55-74. WF6 bound to alpha 181-200 and to a lesser extent to alpha 55-74 and alpha 134-153. The two other mAbs predominantly bound to alpha 55-74, and to a lesser extent to alpha 181-200. Peptides alpha 181-200 and alpha 55-74 both inhibited binding of 125I-alpha-BTX to native Torpedo AChR. None of the peptides corresponding to sequence segments from other subunits bound alpha-BTX or WF6, or interfered with their binding. Therefore, the cholinergic binding site is not a single narrow sequence region, but rather two or more discontinuous sequence segments within the N-terminal extracellular region of the AChR alpha subunit, folded together in the native structure of the receptor, contribute to form a cholinergic binding region. Such a structural arrangement is similar to the "discontinuous epitopes" observed by X-ray diffraction studies of antibody-antigen complexes [reviewed in Davies et al. (1988)].  相似文献   

3.
Peptides corresponding to sequence segments homologous to an alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BGT) binding region on the alpha subunit of the Torpedo nicotinic cholinergic receptor (nAChR) were synthesized for each identified nAChR alpha subunit of the rat nervous system (alpha 1, which is expressed in muscle, and alpha 2, alpha 3, alpha 4, and alpha 5, which are expressed by neurons). The peptides were tested for their ability to directly bind 125I-alpha-BGT and to compete for 125I-alpha-BGT with Torpedo nAChR and with the alpha-BGT-binding component expressed by PC12, a sympathetic neuronal cell line. In addition to peptides of the muscle alpha 1 subunit, peptides corresponding to the sequence of a neuronal subunit, alpha 5, were able to bind 125I-alpha-BGT. Peptides containing the sequence segments 182-201 of the alpha 1 subunit and 180-199 of the alpha 5 subunit competed with Torpedo nAChR for 125I-alpha-BGT binding with IC50 values of 0.5 and 3.5 microM, respectively. Both of these peptides were also able to compete for 125I-alpha-BGT binding with native Torpedo nAChR and with the alpha-BGT-binding protein(s) expressed on PC12 cells. To determine if other sequence segments contribute to form the neuronal alpha-BGT-binding site, overlapping peptides corresponding to the putative extracellular domain of the alpha 5 subunit were synthesized and used both in direct binding assays and in competition experiments. Peptides corresponding to amino acids 16-35 and 180-199 of the alpha 5 subunit directly bound 125I-alpha-BGT and inhibited the binding of toxin to both Torpedo nAChR and PC12 cells. The results of these studies strongly support identification of the alpha 5 subunit as a component of a neuronal alpha-BGT-binding nAChR.  相似文献   

4.
In the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs), the sequence segment surrounding two invariant vicinal cysteinyl residues at positions 192 and 193 of the alpha subunit contains important structural component(s) of the binding site for acetylcholine and high molecular weight cholinergic antagonists, like snake alpha-neurotoxins. At least a second sequence region contributes to the formation of the cholinergic site. Studying the binding of alpha-bungarotoxin and three different monoclonal antibodies, able to compete with alpha-neurotoxins and cholinergic ligands, to a panel of synthetic peptides as representative structural elements of the AChR from Torpedo, we recently identified the sequence segments alpha 181-200 and alpha 55-74 as contributing to form the cholinergic site (Conti-Tronconi et al., 1990). As a first attempt to elucidate the structural requirements for ligand binding to the subsite formed by the sequence alpha 181-200, we have now studied the binding of alpha-bungarotoxin and of antibody WF6 to the synthetic peptide alpha 181-200, and to a panel of peptide analogues differing from the parental sequence alpha 181-200 by substitution of a single amino acid residue. CD spectral analysis of the synthetic peptide analogues indicated that they all have comparable structures in solution, and they can therefore be used to analyze the influence of single amino acid residues on ligand binding. Distinct clusters of amino acid residues, discontinuously positioned along the sequence 181-200, seem to serve as attachment points for the two ligands studied, and the residues necessary for binding of alpha-bungarotoxin are different from those crucial for binding of antibody WF6. In particular, residues at positions 188-190 (VYY) and 192-194 (CCP) were necessary for binding of alpha-bungarotoxin, while residues W187, T191, and Y198 and the three residues at positions 193-195 (CPD) were necessary for binding of WF6. Comparison of the CD spectra of the toxin/peptide complexes, and those obtained for the same peptides and alpha-bungarotoxin in solution, indicates that structural changes of the ligand(s) occur upon binding, with a net increase of the beta-structure component. The cholinergic binding site is therefore a complex surface area, formed by discontinuous clusters of amino acid residues from different sequence regions. Such complex structural arrangement is similar to the "discontinuous epitopes" observed by X-ray diffraction studies of antibody/antigen complexes [reviewed in Davies et al. (1988)]. Within this relatively large structure, cholinergic ligands bind with multiple points of attachment, and ligand-specific patterns of the attachment points exist.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The binding of 125I-labeled rabies virus to a synthetic peptide comprising residues 173-204 of the alpha 1-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor was investigated. Binding of rabies virus to the receptor peptide was dependent on pH, could be competed with by unlabeled homologous virus particles, and was saturable. Synthetic peptides of snake venom, curaremimetic neurotoxins and of the structurally similar segment of the rabies virus glycoprotein, were effective in competing with labeled virus binding to the receptor peptide at micromolar concentrations. Similarly, synthetic peptides of the binding domain on the acetylcholine receptor competed for binding. These findings suggest that both rabies virus and neurotoxins bind to residues 173-204 of the alpha 1-subunit of the acetylcholine receptor. Competition studies with shorter alpha-subunit peptides within this region indicate that the highest affinity virus binding determinants are located within residues 179-192. A rat nerve alpha 3-subunit peptide, that does not bind alpha-bungarotoxin, inhibited binding of virus to the alpha 1 peptide, suggesting that rabies binds to neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. These studies indicate that synthetic peptides of the glycoprotein binding domain and of the receptor binding domain may represent useful antiviral agents by targeting the recognition event between the viral attachment protein and the host cell receptor, and inhibiting attachment of virus to the receptor.  相似文献   

6.
The sequence segment 181-200 of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) alpha subunit forms a binding site for alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) [e.g., see Conti-Tronconi, B. M., Tang, F., Diethelm, B. M., Spencer, S. R., Reinhardt-Maelicke, S., & Maelicke, A. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 6221-6230]. Synthetic peptides corresponding to the homologous sequences of human, calf, mouse, chicken, frog, and cobra muscle nAChR alpha 1 subunits were tested for their ability to bind 125I-alpha-BTX, and differences in alpha-BTX affinity were determined by using solution (IC50S) and solid-phase (KdS) assays. Panels of overlapping peptides corresponding to the complete alpha 1 subunit of mouse and human were also tested for alpha-BTX binding, but other sequence segments forming the alpha-BTX site were not consistently detectable. The Torpedo alpha 1(181-200) and the homologous frog and chicken peptides bound alpha-BTX with higher affinity (KdS approximately 1-2 microM, IC50s approximately 1-2 microM) than the human and calf peptides (Kds approximately 3-5 microM, IC50s approximately 15 microM). The mouse peptide bound alpha-BTX weakly when attached to a solid support (Kd approximately 8 microM) but was effective in competing for 125I-alpha-BTX in solution (IC50 approximately 1 microM). The cobra nAChR alpha 1-subunit peptide did not detectably bind alpha-BTX in either assay. Amino acid substitutions were correlated with alpha-BTX binding activity peptides from different species. The role of a putative vicinal disulfide bound between Cys-192 and -193, relative to the Torpedo sequence, was determined by modifying the peptides with sulfhydryl reagents. Reduction and alkylation of the peptides decreased alpha-BTX binding, whereas oxidation of the peptides had little effect. Modifications of the cysteine/cystine residues of the cobra peptide failed to induce alpha-BTX binding activity. These results indicate that while the adjacent cysteines are likely to be involved in forming the toxin/alpha 1-subunit interface a vicinal disulfide bound was not required for alpha-BTX binding.  相似文献   

7.
alpha-Bungarotoxin blocks acetylcholine-mediated ion channel opening of peripheral acetylcholine receptors (AChR). A major binding region for alpha-bungarotoxin has been recently identified within parts of the segment 170-204 of the alpha-subunit. We used the Pepscan systematic peptide synthesis system to determine the minimum Torpedo AChR segment required for alpha-bungarotoxin binding and to investigate the role of each residue within this segment. Continuously overlapping decapeptides within alpha 179-203 and several decapeptides covering other alpha-subunit sequences showed that alpha 188-197 and alpha 189-198 exhibited the best 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding activity (KD = 7.3 x 10(-8) and 4.3 x 10(-8) M, respectively). Several continuously overlapping nona-, octa-, hepta-, hexa-, and tetrapeptides showed that the heptapeptide alpha 189-195 was the minimum sequence with high binding activity (KD = 5.6 x 10(-8)M). d-Tubocurarine, but not carbamylcholine, blocked toxin binding. Twenty-six analogs of the alpha 188-197, most having 1 residue substituted by Ala or Gly, showed that Tyr189, Tyr190, and especially Asp195 were indispensable for 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Cys192 and Cys193 could be substituted by other amino acids, proving that the disulfide bond between alpha 192-193 was not required for alpha-bungarotoxin binding. The decreased alpha-bungarotoxin binding capacity of the equivalent human muscle AChR alpha 188-197 peptide was the result of substitution of Tyr by Thr at alpha 189.  相似文献   

8.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to sequence segments of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) alpha subunits have been used to identify regions that contribute to formation of the binding sites for cholinergic ligands. We have previously defined alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) binding sequences between residues 180 and 199 of a putative rat neuronal nAChR alpha subunit, designated alpha 5 [McLane, K. E., Wu, X., & Conti-Tronconi, B. M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 9816-9824], and between residues 181 and 200 of the chick neuronal alpha 7 and alpha 8 subunits [McLane, K. E., Wu, X., Schoepfer, R., Lindstrom, J., & Conti-Tronconi, B. M. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. (in press)]. These sequences are relatively divergent compared with the Torpedo and muscle nAChR alpha 1 alpha-BTX binding sites, which indicates a serious limitation of predicting functional domains of proteins based on homology in general. Given the highly divergent nature of the alpha 5 sequence, we were interested in determining the critical amino acid residues for alpha-BTX binding. In the present study, the effects of single amino acid substitutions of Gly or Ala for each residue of the rat alpha 5(180-199) sequence were tested, using a competition assay, in which peptides compete for 125I-alpha-BTX binding with native Torpedo nAChR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
To identify the sequence segments of the alpha 3 subunit of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (N-nAChR) forming the binding site for the cholinergic antagonist kappa-bungarotoxin (kappa-BGT), overlapping peptides corresponding to the complete alpha 3 sequence were tested for their ability to bind 125I-labeled kappa-BGT. Two peptides located within the N-terminal extracellular domain specifically bound kappa-BGT in a solid phase assay, i.e. peptide N alpha(3)51-70 with a Kd approximately 300 nM and peptide N alpha(3)1-18 with slightly lower affinity (Kd approximately 500 nM). Preincubation of 125I-kappa-BGT with peptides N alpha(3)51-70 or N alpha(3)1-18 resulted in greater than 90% inhibition of kappa-125I-BGT binding to native N-nAChR expressed on the neuronal cell line PC12. Under the same conditions, two additional peptides, N alpha(3)180-199 and N alpha(3)183-201, were found to inhibit kappa-125I-BGT binding to PC12 by approximately 50%. These latter peptides represent sequences that are homologous to those shown previously to bind alpha-bungarotoxin. Peptide N alpha(3)51-70 (400 microM) also reduced by approximately 4-fold the observed rate of association of kappa-BGT to PC12 cells. The results of these experiments identify sequence segments of the alpha 3 subunit which are likely to interact with kappa-BGT and may indicate the relative contribution that these segments make in the formation of the high affinity kappa-BGT-binding site of this N-nAChR subtype.  相似文献   

10.
Bracci L  Lozzi L  Lelli B  Pini A  Neri P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(22):6611-6619
Peptide libraries allow selecting new molecules, defined as mimotopes, which are able to mimic the structural and functional features of a native protein. This technology can be applied for the development of new reagents, which can interfere with the action of specific ligands on their target receptors. In the present study we used a combinatorial library approach to produce synthetic peptides mimicking the snake neurotoxin binding site of nicotinic receptors. On the basis of amino acid sequence comparison of different alpha-bungarotoxin binding receptors, we designed a 14 amino acid combinatorial synthetic peptide library with five invariant, four partially variant, and five totally variant positions. Peptides were synthesized using SPOT synthesis on cellulose membranes, and binding sequences were selected using biotinylated alpha-bungarotoxin. Each variant position was systematically identified, and all possible combinations of the best reacting amino acids in each variant position were tested. The best reactive sequences were identified, produced in soluble form, and tested in BIACORE to compare their kinetic constants. We identified several different peptides that can inhibit the binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to both muscle and neuronal nicotinic receptors. Peptide mimotopes have a toxin-binding affinity that is considerably higher than peptides reproducing native receptor sequences.  相似文献   

11.
P T Wilson  T L Lentz 《Biochemistry》1988,27(18):6667-6674
In order to investigate structure-function relationships of a segment of the acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit, binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to synthetic peptides corresponding to residues 173-204 of Torpedo, calf, and human alpha subunits was compared using a solid-phase radioassay. The affinities of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin for the calf and human peptides were 15- and 150-fold less, respectively, than for the Torpedo peptide. On the basis of nonconservative substitutions in the calf and human sequences, aromatic residues (Tyr-181, Trp-187, and Tyr-189) are important for the higher affinity binding of the Torpedo peptide. Substitution of negatively charged Glu-180 with uncharged Gln in the calf peptide did not significantly affect toxin binding, indicating Glu-180 alone does not comprise the anionic subsite on the receptor to which the cationic quaternary ammonium groups of cholinergic agents bind. d-Tubocurarine competed toxin binding to the modified calf 32-mer which lacks Glu-180 and Asp-195 present in Torpedo. Thus, the negative subsite could be formed by another negatively charged residue or by more than one amino acid side chain. It is possible that the positive charges on cholinergic ligands are countered by a negative electrostatic potential provided by polar groups, such as the hydroxyl group of tyrosine, present on several residues in this region, and the negative charges present on any of residues 175, 180, 195, or 200. Equilibrium saturation binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to Torpedo peptide 173-204 revealed a minor binding component with an apparent KD of 4.2 nM and a major component with a KD of 63 nM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Nicotinic and serotoninergic 5HT3 receptors share important sequence identities except for their cytoplasmic loop. Both ends of this loop display conserved 3D helical structures with distinct primary sequences. We decided to check whether these two helices named F and G play a role in the sub-cellular distribution of different nicotinic receptors. We systematically exchanged each helix with the equivalent sequence of neuronal nicotinic and alpha4, beta2 and alpha7 subunits in the functional chimeric alpha7-5HT3 receptor used as a model system. The new chimeras were expressed in vitro in polarized epithelial cells from pig kidney. We quantified synthesis and export of the receptors to the cell surface by measuring alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites. Immunogold labelling was used, at the electron microscope level, to determine the amount of each chimera present at either domain, apical and/or basolateral, of these cells. We noticed that in epithelial cells the majority of alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites remained sequestered in the cytoplasm as already observed in neurons in vivo. The majority of the pentamers present at the cell surface were located at the apical domain. Our results suggest that helix F and G differently regulate assembly and export to the cell surface of alpha-bungarotoxin binding receptors.  相似文献   

13.
T L Lentz  E Hawrot  P T Wilson 《Proteins》1987,2(4):298-307
Peptides corresponding to portions of loop 2 of snake venom curare-mimetic neurotoxins and to a structurally similar region of rabies virus glycoprotein were synthesized. Interaction of these peptides with purified Torpedo electric organ acetylcholine receptor was tested by measuring their ability to block the binding of 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin to the receptor. In addition, inhibition of alpha-bungarotoxin binding to a 32-residue synthetic peptide corresponding to positions 173-204 of the alpha-subunit was determined. Neurotoxin and glycoprotein peptides corresponding to toxin loop 2 inhibited labeled toxin binding to the receptor with IC50 values comparable to those of nicotine and the competitive antagonist d-tubocurarine and to the alpha-subunit peptides with apparent affinities between those of d-tubocurarine and alpha-cobratoxin. Substitution of neurotoxin residue Arg37, the proposed counterpart of the quaternary ammonium of acetylcholine, with a negatively charged Glu residue reduced the apparent affinity about 10-fold. Peptides containing the neurotoxin invariant residue Trp29 and 10- to 100-fold higher affinities than peptides lacking this residue. These results demonstrate that relatively short synthetic peptides retain some of the binding ability of the native protein from which they are derived, indicating that such peptides are useful in the study of protein-protein interactions. The ability of the peptides to compete alpha-bungarotoxin binding to the receptor with apparent affinities comparable to those of other cholinergic ligands indicates that loop 2 of the neurotoxins and the structurally similar segment of the rabies virus glycoprotein act as recognition sites for the acetylcholine receptor. Invariant toxin residues Arg37 and Trp29 and their viral homologs play important, although not essential, roles in binding, possibly by interaction with complementary anionic and hydrophobic subsites on the acetylcholine receptor. The alpha-subunit peptide most likely contains all of the determinants for binding of the toxin and glycoprotein peptides present on the alpha-subunit, because these peptides bind to the 32-residue alpha-subunit peptide with the same or greater affinity as to the intact subunit.  相似文献   

14.
The structural features of the heterodimeric glycoprotein hormones (LH, FSH, TSH, and hCG) are briefly reviewed. Removal of carbohydrate chains does not reduce binding of the hormones to membrane receptors, but markedly reduces biological responses. The glycopeptides from the hormone do not reduce binding of native hormone to receptors but do reduce biological responses. Newer data concerned with replication of different regions of the peptide chains of these molecules using synthetic peptides are reviewed and presented. These studies indicate that two regions on the common alpha subunit are involved with receptor binding of the LH, hCG, and TSH molecules. These regions are alpha 26 to 46 and alpha 75-92. Two synthetic disulfide loop peptides from the hCG beta subunit beta 38-57 and beta 93-100 also block binding of hCG to its receptor. In addition, the beta 38-57 peptide stimulates testosterone production by Leydig cells. These data indicate that glycoprotein hormone binding to plasma membrane receptors involves a discontinuous site on the hormone that spans both the alpha and beta subunits, and that the alpha subunit sites are similar for several hormones.  相似文献   

15.
alpha-Bungarotoxin, the classic nicotinic antagonist, has high specificity for muscle type alpha1 subunits in nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. In this study, we show that an 11-amino-acid pharmatope sequence, containing residues important for alpha-bungarotoxin binding to alpha1, confers functional alpha-bungarotoxin sensitivity when strategically placed into a neuronal non-alpha subunit, normally insensitive to this toxin. Remarkably, the mechanism of toxin inhibition is allosteric, not competitive as with neuromuscular nicotinic receptors. Our findings argue that alpha-bungarotoxin binding to the pharmatope, inserted at a subunit-subunit interface diametrically distinct from the agonist binding site, interferes with subunit interface movements critical for receptor activation. Our results, taken together with the structural similarities between nicotinic and GABAA receptors, suggest that this allosteric mechanism is conserved in the Cys-loop ion channel family. Furthermore, as a general strategy, the engineering of allosteric inhibitory sites through pharmatope tagging offers a powerful new tool for the study of membrane proteins.  相似文献   

16.
Acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) with high affinity for nicotine but no affinity for alpha-bungarotoxin, which have been purified from rat and chicken brains by immuno-affinity chromatography, consist of two types of subunits, alpha and beta. The beta-subunits form the ACh binding sites. Putative nicotinic AChR subunit cDNAs alpha 3 and alpha 4 have been identified by screening cDNA libraries prepared from rat PC12 cells and rat brain with cDNA probes encoding the mouse muscle AChR alpha-subunit. Here we determine the amino-terminal amino acid sequence of the rat brain AChR beta-subunit by protein microsequencing to be the same as amino acid residues 27-43 of the protein which could be coded by alpha 4. Further, we present evidence consistent with a subunit stoichiometry of alpha 3 beta 2 for this neuronal nicotinic AChR.  相似文献   

17.
Factor H, a very important regulator of alternative pathway activation, exerts its effects by binding to the third component complement, C3. In this study we present evidence that factor H reacts with at least two sites in the third component of complement (C3), and we have mapped one of these sites within the C3d fragment of C3. By using direct binding assays of an anti-human H anti-idiotypic antibody (alpha alpha H) and of H to C3 fragments, it was shown that both bound to the C3b and C3d (but not to C3c) fragments of C3. Cleavage of C3d by CNBr generated two major fragments with Mr values of 12,500 (residues 997-1107) and 8,600 (residues 1178-1252). Binding studies with these two fragments showed that only the Mr 8,600 fragment bound to both H and alpha alpha H. Several synthetic peptides (A58, 1192-1249; P28, 1187-1214; P16, 1194-1209; P14, 1201-1214; B17, 1206-1222; J28, 1222-1249; and J16, 1234-1249) were synthesized according to the primary sequence of the Mr 8,600 fragment. Based on the differential binding of these synthetic peptides to H, their inhibitory effect on H binding to C3b or C3d, and their effect on H cofactor activity, we mapped the H binding site in C3 to a discontinuous site spanning residues 1187-1249 of the C3 sequence. By studying the inhibition of H binding to C3b or C3d by the different synthetic peptides, we also present evidence that a second binding site in C3b for H exists.  相似文献   

18.
Antibodies were raised against eight synthetic peptides matching preselected portions of the amino acid sequence of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) from Torpedo marmorata. To increase the probability of obtaining antibodies specific for the exact sequence of the immunizing peptide, peptides of only five to seven amino acids in length were employed. Even under these limiting conditions some of the polyclonal rabbit immune sera showed cross-reactivity with other peptides and/or other sequence regions of the receptor. Further studies with polyclonal and monoclonal sera suggested that conformation and charge pattern rather than linear sequence are the essential determinants of antibody epitopes. Application of antibodies for topological studies therefore requires that the antibody specificity for a particular region of the antigen has been firmly established. Epitope mapping with the eight anti-peptide immune sera provides information on the accessibility to antibody of matching sequences within the receptor molecule. We find the sequence portions alpha 81-85, alpha 127-132, and alpha 190-195 to be freely accessible both at membrane-bound and at purified receptor. Binding of anti-alpha 387-392 serum does not prove accessibility of this region as the serum cross-reacts strongly with peptide fragments corresponding to the regions alpha 165-200 and beta 190-200 of nAChR from Torpedo californica. To permit binding of anti-alpha 137-142 immune serum, treatment of the receptor with endoglycosidase is required, showing that Asn-141 indeed is glycosylated in native nAChR. The homologous sequence of the other subunits differing only in one sequence position from alpha 137-142 is not accessible in native nAChR to antibody, indicating clear differences in folding of the receptor polypeptides. Sequence portions alpha 395-401 and alpha 161-166 must first be exposed by appropriate treatment to permit binding of respective serum. These results and previous epitope mapping studies by other laboratories are discussed with respect to the limited sequence specificity of antibodies.  相似文献   

19.
We have previously shown that the alpha chain of human fibrinogen interacts directly with ADP-activated human platelets [Hawiger, J., Timmons, S., Kloczewiak, M., Strong, D. D., & Doolittle, R. F. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 2068]. Now, we report that platelet receptor recognition domains are localized on two CNBr fragments of the human fibrinogen alpha chain. They encompass residues 92-147 and 518-584, which inhibit 125I-fibrinogen binding to ADP-stimulated platelets. The inhibitory CNBr fragment alpha 92-147 contains the RGD sequence at residues 95-97. Synthetic peptides encompassing this sequence were inhibitory while peptide 99-113 lacking the RGD sequence was inactive. The synthetic peptide RGDF, corresponding to residues alpha 95-98, inhibited the binding of 125I-fibrinogen to ADP-treated platelets (IC50 = 2 microM). However, the peptides containing sequence RGDF, with residues preceding Arg95 or following Phe98, were less inhibitory. It appears that the sequence alpha 95-98 constitutes a platelet receptor recognition domain which is constrained by flanking residues. The second inhibitory CNBr fragment, alpha 518-584, also contains the sequence RGD at positions 572-574. Synthetic peptides overlapping this sequence were inhibitory, while peptides lacking the sequence RGDS were not reactive. Thus, another platelet reactive site on the alpha chain encompasses residues 572-575 containing sequence RGDS. In conclusion, the platelet receptor recognition domains on the human fibrinogen alpha chain in the amino-terminal and in the carboxy-terminal zones contain the ubiquitous cell recognition sequence RGD shared with other known adhesive proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
M K Das  J Lindstrom 《Biochemistry》1991,30(9):2470-2477
Concurrent synthesis of overlapping octameric peptides corresponding to the sequence of the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha subunit has been carried out on polypropylene supports functionalized with primary amino groups according to a method developed by M. Geysen [(1987) J. Immunol. Methods 102, 259-274]. The peptides on the solid supports have been used in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Interactions of the synthetic peptides with antibodies are then detected without removing them from the solid support. By this procedure, epitopes of both antisera and monoclonal antibodies to the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor, its subunits, and synthetic peptide fragments have been mapped. Both rat and rabbit antisera to the alpha subunit show major epitopes spanning the residues 150-165, 338-345, and 355-366 on the Torpedo AChR alpha subunit. Epitopes of monoclonal antibodies to these major epitopes and to others have been rather precisely mapped by using this technique with peptides of varying lengths. The specificity of several of these mAbs are of interest because they have been used in mapping the transmembrane orientation of the AChR alpha-subunit polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

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