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1.
The relationship of the acetylcholine transporter-vesamicol receptor (AcChT-VR) to proteoglycan in Torpedo electric organ synaptic vesicles was investigated. The cholate-solubilized VR was immunoprecipitated by a monoclonal antibody directed against the SV1 epitope located in the glycosaminoglycan portion of the proteoglycan. AcChT that was photoaffinity-labeled with a tritiated high-affinity analogue of AcCh [cyclohexylmethyl cis-N-(4-azidophenacyl)-N-methylisonipecotate] and then denatured in sodium dodecyl sulfate also immunoprecipitated. The labeled AcChT exhibited a M(r) range of 100,000-200,000. Proteoglycan did not engage in detectable nonspecific reversible aggregation that might mask the presence of another subunit during sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. In vesicles permeabilized with cholate, the enzymes keratanase and testicular hyaluronidase inactivated binding of vesamicol and destroyed the SV1 epitope without detectable proteolysis. Other glycosaminoglycan-degrading enzymes were without effect. The results demonstrate that the AcChT-VR and proteoglycan are very strongly linked and that glycosaminoglycan-like polysaccharide controls the conformation of the VR. The unexpected linkage to proteoglycan suggests that AcChT-VR in intact terminals might communicate with extracellular matrix and participate in stabilization and operation of the synapse.  相似文献   

2.
A protein that binds vesamicol has been purified from a soluble fraction of the Torpedo electric organ homogenate that does not contain synaptic vesicles. The purified vesamicol-binding protein (VBP) has a molecular mass of 470 kDa composed of 30- and 24-kDa subunits. Chemical deglycosylation yielded a single, heterogeneous protein of 24 kDa. The 30-kDa subunit is also sensitive to endo-beta-galactosidase. The dissociation constant of the VBP.vesamicol complex is 0.9 microM, and the Bmax is 5,500 pmol/mg. Antiserum raised to the 30-kDa subunit cross-reacts with the 24-kDa subunit, but not with synaptic vesicles. Drug binding studies and Western blot analysis show that VBP is present in other Torpedo tissues as well as mammalian brain. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrates that VBP-like immunoreactivity is not localized exclusively to the nerve terminal regions of the electric organ. Thermal stability, the pH dependence of vesamicol binding, and pharmacological comparisons demonstrate that the VBP is not the cholinergic synaptic vesicle receptor for vesamicol. The implications of this finding for current efforts to develop in vivo diagnostics of cholinergic nerve terminal status based on vesamicol are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
L M Gracz  W C Wang  S M Parsons 《Biochemistry》1988,27(14):5268-5274
Crude cholinergic synaptic vesicles from a homogenate of the electric organ of Torpedo californica were centrifuged to equilibrium in an isosmotic sucrose density gradient. The classical VP1 synaptic vesicles banding at 1.055 g/mL actively transported [3H]acetylcholine (AcCh). An organelle banding at about 1.071 g/mL transported even more [3H]AcCh. Transport by both organelles was inhibited by the known AcCh storage blockers trans-2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (vesamicol, formerly AH5183) and nigericin. Relative to VP1 vesicles the denser organelle was slightly smaller as shown by size-exclusion chromatography. It is concluded that the denser organelle corresponds to the recycling VP2 synaptic vesicle originally described in intact Torpedo marmorata electric organ [Zimmermann, H., & Denston, C.R. (1977) Neuroscience (Oxford) 2, 695-714; Zimmermann, H., & Denston, C.R. (1977) Neuroscience (Oxford) 2, 715-730]. The properties of the receptor for vesamicol were studied by measuring binding of [3H]vesamicol, and the amount of SV2 antigen characteristic of secretory vesicles was assayed with a monoclonal antibody directed against it. Relative to VP1 vesicles the VP2 vesicles had a ratio of [3H]AcCh transport activity to vesamicol receptor concentration that typically was 4-7-fold higher, whereas the ratio of SV2 antigen concentration to vesamicol receptor concentration was about 2-fold higher. Based on an antibody standardization, in a typical preparation the VP1 vesicles contained 237 +/- 15 pmol of receptor/mg of protein whereas VP2 vesicles contained 102 +/- 3 pmol of receptor/mg of protein, and VP2 vesicles transported AcCh 2-3-fold more actively than VP1 vesicles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
G A Rogers  S M Parsons 《Biochemistry》1992,31(25):5770-5777
The acetylcholine (AcCh) binding site in the AcCh transporter-vesamicol receptor (AcChT-VR) present in synaptic vesicles isolated from the electric organ of Torpedo was characterized. A high-affinity analogue of AcCh containing an aryl azido group, namely, cyclohexylmethyl cis-N-(4-azidophenacyl)-N-methylisonipecotate bromide (AzidoAcCh), was synthesized in nonradioactive and highly tritiated forms. AzidoAcCh was shown to be a competitive inhibitor of [3H]AcCh active transport and binding of [3H]-vesamicol to the allosteric site. The [3H]AzidoAcCh saturation curve was determined. In all cases the AcChT.AzidoAcCh complex exhibited an inhibition or dissociation constant of about 0.3 microM. Binding of [3H]AzidoAcCh was inhibited by vesamicol and AcCh. AzidoAcCh irreversibly blocked greater than 90% of the [3H]vesamicol binding sites after multiple rounds of photolysis and reequilibration with fresh ligand. Autofluorographs of synaptic vesicles photoaffinity-labeled with [3H]AzidoAcCh showed specific labeling of material exhibiting a continuous distribution from 50 to 250 kDa after sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The result demonstrates that the AcChT has an unexpected structure highly suggestive of the synaptic vesicle proteoglycan.  相似文献   

5.
The ligand binding relationship between the acetylcholine transporter (AcChT) and the vesamicol receptor (VR) and the kinetics of active transport were studied in synaptic vesicles purified from the Torpedo electric organ using analogues of AcCh and vesamicol. Methoxyvesamicol, which should exhibit better equilibration properties for kinetics measurements than the more potent parent, inhibits active transport in a nonlinear noncompetitive manner. AcCh analogues competitively inhibit binding of [3H]vesamicol with higher affinity in hyposmotically lysed vesicle ghosts than in intact vesicles, apparently due to removal of a competing internal, osmotically active factor. AcCh and actively transported analogues of AcCh that are up to 57% larger in van der Waals volume exhibit up to a 200-fold ratio for the dissociation constant measured by inhibition of vesamicol binding to ghosts (KIAg) compared to the Michaelis constant for transport (KM) or the IC50 value for inhibition of [3H]AcCh active transport. In contrast, two AcCh analogues that are about 120% larger and that almost surely are not transported exhibit a KIAg/IC50 ratio of about 1. The data demonstrate that the vesamicol family of compounds binds to an allosteric site in the AcChT. Initiation of active transport has no apparent effect on the affinities of vesamicol and AcCh analogues, which suggests that most of the AcChT-VR in purified vesicles is transport incompetent. Vesicle ghosts actively transport [3H]AcCh nearly as well as intact vesicles, which suggests that internal factor does not affect transport-competent AcChT-VR. A kinetics model is proposed that predicts that AcCh analogues exhibiting a KIAg/IC50 ratio significantly greater than 1 are actively transported. Some of the microscopic constants in the model are estimated. The AcChT binds AcCh very weakly with a dissociation constant of about 20-50 mM, but it transports substrates rapidly in a process exhibiting remarkably little selectivity for the detailed shape and volume of the transported ion.  相似文献   

6.
The SV2 Protein of Synaptic Vesicles Is a Keratan Sulfate Proteoglycan   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Abstract: We have determined that synaptic vesicles contain a vesicle-specific keratan sulfate integral membrane proteoglycan. This is a major proteoglycan in electric organ synaptic vesicles. It exists in two forms on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, i.e., the L form, which migrates like a protein with an Mr of 100, 000, and the H form, with a lower mobility that migrates with an Mr of ∼250, 000. Both forms contain SV2, an epitope located on the cytoplasmic side of the vesicle membrane. In addition to electric organ, we have analyzed the SV2 proteoglycan in vesicle fractions from two other sources, electric fish brain and rat brain. Both the H and L forms of SV2 are present in these vesicles and all are keratan sulfate proteoglycans. Unlike previously studied synaptic vesicle proteins, this proteoglycan contains a marker specific for a single group of neurons. This marker is an antigenically unique keratan sulfate side chain that is specific for the cells innervating the electric organ; it is not found on the synaptic vesicle keratan sulfate proteoglycan in other neurons of the electric fish brain.  相似文献   

7.
Cholinergic synaptic vesicles were isolated from the electric organs of the electric eel (Electrophorus electricus) and the electric catfish (Malapterurus electricus) as well as from the diaphragm of the rat by density gradient centrifugation followed by column chromatography on Sephacryl-1000. This was verified by both biochemical and electron microscopic criteria. Differences in size between synaptic vesicles from the various tissue sources were reflected by their elution pattern from the Sephacryl column. Specific activities of acetylcholine (ACh; in nmol/mg of protein) of chromatography-purified vesicle fractions were 36 (electric eel), 2 (electric catfish), and 1 (rat diaphragm). Synaptic vesicles from all three sources contained ATP in addition to ACh (molar ratios of ACh/ATP, 9-12) as well as binding activity for an antibody raised against Torpedo cholinergic synaptic vesicle proteoglycan. Synaptic vesicles from rat diaphragm contained binding activity for the monoclonal antibody asv 48 raised against a rat brain 65-kilodalton synaptic vesicle protein. Antibody asv 48 binding was absent from electric eel and electric catfish synaptic vesicles. These antibody binding results, which were obtained by a dot blot assay on isolated vesicles, directly correspond to the immunocytochemical results demonstrating fluorescein isothiocyanate staining in the respective nerve terminals. Our results imply that ACh, ATP, and proteoglycan are common molecular constituents of motor nerve terminal-derived synaptic vesicles from Torpedo to rat. In addition to ACh, both ATP and proteoglycan may play a specific role in the process of cholinergic signal transmission.  相似文献   

8.
We have prepared highly purified synaptic vesicles from rat brain by subjecting vesicles purified by our previous method to a further fractionation step, i.e., equilibrium centrifugation on a Ficoll gradient. Monoclonal antibodies to three membrane proteins enriched in synaptic vesicles--SV2, synaptophysin, and p65--each were able to immunoprecipitate specifically approximately 90% of the total membrane protein from Ficoll-purified synaptic vesicle preparations. Anti-SV2 precipitated 96% of protein, anti-synaptophysin 92%, and anti-p65 83%. These results demonstrate two points: (1) Ficoll-purified synaptic vesicles appear to be greater than 90% pure, i.e., less than 10% of membranes in the preparation do not carry synaptic vesicle-associated proteins. These very pure synaptic vesicles may be useful for direct biochemical analyses of mammalian synaptic vesicle composition and function. (2) SV2, synaptophysin, and p65 coexist on most rat brain synaptic vesicles. This result suggests that the functions of these proteins are common to most brain synaptic vesicles. However, if SV2, synaptophysin, or p65 is involved in synaptic vesicle dynamics, e.g., in vesicle trafficking or exocytosis, separate cellular systems are very likely required to modulate the activity of such proteins in a temporally or spatially specific manner.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract: The distribution of o-rab3—a synaptic vesicle-associated low-molecular-weight GTP-binding protein—was studied in various neural tissues of the electric ray Torpedo marmorata. o-rab3 was shown to be associated selectively with isolated cholinergic synaptic vesicles derived from the electric organ. Gel filtration of cholinergic synaptic vesicles using Sephacryl S-1000 column chromatography demonstrated a copurification of o-rab3 with the synaptic vesicle content marker ATP and with SV2—a synaptic vesicle transmembrane glycoprotein. Indirect immunofluorescence using antibodies against o-rab3 and SV2 and a double labeling protocol revealed an identical distribution of both antigens in the cholinergic nerve terminals within the electric organ and at neuromuscular junctions. An immunoelectron microscopic analysis demonstrated the presence of o-rab3 at the surface of the synaptic vesicle membrane. In the CNS immunofluorescence of o-rab3 and SV2 overlap only in small and distinct areas. Whereas SV2 has an overall distribution in nerve terminals of the entire CNS, o-rab3 is restricted to a subpopulation of nerve terminals in the dorsolateral neuropile of the rhombencephalon and in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Our results demonstrate that the synaptic vesicle-associated G protein o-rab3 is specifically expressed only in subpopulations of neurons in the Torpedo CNS.  相似文献   

10.
Vesamicol is a highly potent inhibitor of active acetylcholine transport into isolated cholinergic vesicles from Torpedo. On the basis of transport kinetics and vesamicol sensitivity, we have shown that the acetylcholine transporter could be in an activated state even in the absence of a stimulated ATPase. In this preparation, N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD), an hydrophobic carbodiimide, inactivates both ACh transport and vesamicol binding. Inhibition of vesamicol binding by DCCD is time dependent, saturable and prevented by vesamicol. DCCD first affected the affinity constant for vesamicol. Ki-value for DCCD lies in the micromolar range. These results imply that there is a DCCD reactive site within the ACh transporter and that it is located in an hydrophobic environment near the vesamicol binding site. SDS-gel electrophoresis after labelling of the vesicle membrane proteins with [14C]DCCD shows that radioactivity is mainly incorporated in a 15 kDa subunit. Time-course and concentration dependence of [14C]DCCD labelling and vesamicol inhibition do not coincide. Hence, the two processes are probably unrelated and the result rather points to another inactivation mechanism which can be an intramolecular cross link.  相似文献   

11.
An antiserum to cholinergic synaptic vesicles isolated from the electric organ of Torpedo marmorata was purified by adsorption with fractions containing unwanted antigens. The adsorbed antiserum responds to the proteoglycan core material of the cholinergic synaptic vesicles. The major antigen migrates in an anomalous fashion on sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), forming a broad band with an apparent molecular weight of approximately 120,000 - 300,000. The distribution of this antigen after sucrose density gradient centrifugation of synaptic vesicles is the same as that of vesicular ATP. The antigen comigrates with a substance that can be stained with Alcian-Blue after SDS-PAGE of highly purified synaptic vesicles. This substance is related to the low-molecular-weight, Alcian-Blue-positive glycosaminoglycan vesiculin, which is formed from the high-molecular-weight proteoglycan by prolonged dialysis against water or by protease treatment. No antibodies were detected against vesiculin itself, indicating that the antigenic determinants are restricted to the proteoglycan.  相似文献   

12.
Interactions between growing axons and synaptic basal lamina components direct the formation of neuromuscular junctions during nerve regeneration. Isoforms of laminin containing alpha5 or beta2 chains are potential basal lamina ligands for these interactions. The nerve terminal receptors are unknown. Here we show that SV2, a synaptic vesicle transmembrane proteoglycan, is complexed with a 900-kDa laminin on synaptosomes from the electric organ synapse that is similar to the neuromuscular junctions. Although two laminins are present on synaptosomes, only the 900-kDa laminin is associated with SV2. Other nerve terminal components are absent from this complex. The 900-kDa laminin contains an alpha5, a beta1, and a novel gamma chain. To test whether SV2 directly binds the 900-kDa laminin, we looked for interaction between purified SV2 and laminin-1, a laminin isoform with a similar structure. We find SV2 binds with high affinity to purified laminin-1. Our results suggest that a synaptic vesicle component may act as a laminin receptor on the presynaptic plasma membrane; they also suggest a mechanism for activity-dependent adhesion at the synapse.  相似文献   

13.
We have examined PC12 cells for the localization of binding sites for vesamicol [l-2-(4-phenylpiperidino) cyclohexanol], a compound that has previously been shown to bind to cholinergic vesicles and to inhibit the uptake of acetylcholine. Initial studies presented in this article demonstrate the existence of a specific, saturable vesamicol binding site in PC12 cells. Subsequent experiments show that these binding sites reside in a membrane population that is distinct from catecholamine-containing compartments with respect to density and antigenic composition. In particular, vesamicol binding compartments have a lower density than catecholaminergic vesicles and, unlike these latter vesicles, do not appear to contain the vesicle-specific proteins synaptophysin and SV2 as part of the same membrane. These results suggest that vesicular transport proteins for acetylcholine and catecholamines are differentially sorted to distinct membrane compartments in PC12 cells.  相似文献   

14.
Cholinergic nerve terminals utilize glycoconjugates in several ways, as surface markers and as structural components of the synaptic vesicles present within them. The surface markers have been discovered immunochemically: antibodies raised against them are able specifically to sensitize the cholinergic subpopulation of mammalian brain synaptosomes to complement-mediated lysis. One such group of antigens (Chol-1) have been identified as a novel series of minor gangliosides having in common a sialylatedN-acetylgalactosamine residue. These gangliosides may constitute the major gangliosides at cholinergic terminals. A second surface antigen (Chol-2) is thought to be a protein with an epitope in common with aTorpedo electric organ ganglioside. Cholinergic synaptic vesicles are rich in a proteoglycan which appears to assist in the sequestration of acetylcholine within the vesicle and to stabilize the vesicle membrane during cycles of exocytosis and recovery. It may be the cholinergic equivalent of the chromogranins.Abbreviations AP affinity purified - ATPase adenosine 5-triphosphate phosphohydrolase - cer ceramido - ChAT choline acetyltransferase - Chol-1, –2 cholinergic-specific antigens - DA dopamine - DOG deoxyglucose - ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorption assay - EOD electric organ discharge - FAB fast atomic bombardment - GABA -aminobutyrate - GAG glycosaminoglycan - gal galactosyl - gaINAc N-acetylgalactosaminyl - glc glucosyl - Glu glutamate - 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine - LDH lactate dehydrogenase - NA noradrenaline - NGF nerve growth factor - S, S-S mono-, disialyl - SPM synaptosomal plasma membrane - TH tyrosine hydroxylase - TLC thin-layer chromatography - TSM Torpedo electromotor synaptosomal membrane - VIP vasoactive intestinal polypeptide - VPG vesicle proteoglycan Special issue dedicated to Dr. Leon Wolfe.  相似文献   

15.
Cholinergic synaptic vesicles obtained from Torpedo electric organ have an active transport system for acetylcholine (ACh). Linked to ACh transport is a cytoplasmically oriented receptor for the inhibitory drug (-)-trans-2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (vesamicol, formerly AH5183). Storage of freshly isolated vesicles for several days leads to more vesamicol binding. This can be induced immediately by hyposmotic lysis of the vesicles, which reseal to form right-side-out ghosts. The increased drug binding was due to a twofold increase in the affinity and a 20% increase in the amount of the receptor expressed, probably as a result of the release of an endogenous factor. Binding of vesamicol to ghosts was specifically inhibited by exogenous ACh acting with a dissociation constant of 18 mM. This suggests that the vesamicol binding site probably is linked to a low-affinity ACh binding site that is different from the higher affinity transport binding site. Equilibrium and kinetic attempts to determine whether exogenous ACh acts on the outside or the inside of the ghost membrane to inhibit vesamicol binding failed because of rapid equilibration of exogenous ACh across the ghost membrane. It is argued that the endogenous factor released by hyposmotic lysis might be ACh. Potential roles for such a transmembrane signal regulating the vesamicol receptor are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The binding of (1)-[3H]vesamicol was characterized in several subcellular fractions and brain regions of the rat. Binding to a lysed P2 fraction from the rat cerebral cortex reached equilibrium within 4 min at 37°C and was reversible (dissociation half-time 4.9 min). At least two binding affinities were found in P2 fractions from the cerebral cortex (Kd:21 nM and 980 nM), striatum (Kd:28 nM and 690 nM), and cerebellum (Kd:22 nM and 833 nM). High affinity Bmax values were highest in striatum (1.17 pmol/mg protein), followed by cerebellum (0.67 pmol/mg protein), and cerebral cortex (0.38 pmol/mg protein). Low affinity Bmax values were highest in cerebellum (5.2 pmol/mg protein), with similar values for cerebral cortex (3.7 pmol/mg protein) and striatum (3.8 pmol/mg protein). High affinity but not low affinity binding in each brain region was stereospecific. Another inhibitor of vesicular ACh-transport also displaced 1-vesamicol binding potently (IC50:17 nM) and efficaciously (over 90%). Both high affinity and low affinity Bmax values for [3H]vesamicol-binding were highest in a partially purified synaptic vesicle fraction, followed by puriffied synaptosomes, crude membranes and P2 fractions. Specific binding was not observed in a mitochondria-enriched fraction. Crude membrane preparations of primary, neuron-enriched whole brain cultures also exhibited high (64 nM) and low affinity (1062 nM) [3H]vesamicol binding. Isoosmotic replaement of 0.18 M KCl in the binding-buffer with NaCl had no effect on binding. These results suggest that at least some high affinity [3H]vesamicol binding in rat brain preparations may be associated with synaptic vesicles, some of which may not be cholinergic in origin.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract: Synaptic vesicles isolated from electric ray electric organ have been shown previously to contain a 34-kDa protein that binds azido-ATP, azido-AMP, and N -ethylmaleimide. The protein was found to share similarities with the mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier and assumed to represent the synaptic vesicle nucleotide transporter. Synaptic vesicles were purified by sucrose density gradient centrifugation and subsequent chromatography on Sephacryl S-1000 from both Torpedo electric organ and bovine brain cerebral cortex. They contained ATP-binding proteins of 35 kDa and 34 kDa, respectively. ATP binding was inhibited by AMP. Both proteins were highly enriched after column chromatography of vesicle proteins of AMP-Sepharose. Antibodies were obtained against both proteins. Antibodies against the bovine brain synaptic vesicle protein of 34 kDa bound specifically to the 35-kDa protein of Torpedo vesicles. An N-terminal sequence obtained against the 34-kDa protein of bovine brain synaptic vesicles identified it as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. The previously observed molecular characteristics of the putative vesicular nucleotide transporter in Torpedo fit those of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. We, therefore, suggest that the protein previously identified as putative nucleotide transporter is, in fact, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

18.
Synaptic vesicle protein 2 binds adenine nucleotides   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Synaptic vesicle protein 2 (SV2) is required for normal calcium-regulated secretion of hormones and neurotransmitters. Neurons lacking the two most widely expressed isoforms, SV2A and SV2B, have a reduced readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles, indicating that SV2 contributes to vesicle priming. The presence of putative ATP-binding sites in SV2 suggested that SV2 might be an ATP-binding protein. To explore this, we examined the binding of the photoaffinity reagent 8-azido-ATP[gamma] biotin to purified, recombinant SV2 in the presence and absence of other nucleotides. Our results indicate that SV2A and SV2B bind nucleotides, with the highest affinity for adenine-containing nucleotides. SV2A contains two binding sites located in the cytoplasmic domains preceding the first and seventh transmembrane domains. These results suggest that SV2-mediated vesicle priming could be regulated by adenine nucleotides, which might provide a link between cellular energy levels and regulated secretion.  相似文献   

19.
W D Kornreich  S M Parsons 《Biochemistry》1988,27(14):5262-5267
Cholinergic synaptic vesicles isolated from Torpedo electric organ contain a receptor for the compound l-2-(4-phenylpiperidino)cyclohexanol (vesamicol, formerly AH5183), which when occupied blocks storage of acetylcholine (AcCh). The inside or outside orientation of the receptor and its chemical and ligand binding kinetics characteristics were studied. Binding of [3H]vesamicol to the receptor is inhibited efficiently by the protein modification reagents 4-(chloromercuri)benzenesulfonate and N,N'-dicyclo-hexylcarbodiimide and by protease treatment of cholate-solubilized receptor. The receptor in native vesicles is resistant to irreversible inactivation by proteases, elevated temperature, or pH extremes. [3H]Vesamicol binding depends on deprotonation of a group of pKa1 = 6.26 +/- 0.03 and protonation of a group of pKa2 = 10.60 +/- 0.04, which is probably the tertiary amine of the drug molecule itself. The membrane-impermeant zwitterionic vesamicol analogue dl-trans-4-oxo-4-[5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-6-hydroxy-7-(4-phenyl-1-piperidinyl )-1- naphthalenyl]amino]butanoic acid (TPNB) is an effective inhibitor of AcCh active transport with an IC50 value of (51 +/- 8) x 10(-9) M. At 23 degrees C, [3H]vesamicol bound to the receptor at a rate of (1.74 +/- 0.06) x 10(5) M-1 s-1, and excess unlabeled vesamicol displaced a low concentration of bound [3H]vesamicol at 0.29 +/- 0.01 min-1. At 0 degrees C, 10 microM unlabeled vesamicol displaced 36 +/- 2% of a low concentration of bound [3H]vesamicol at 0.16 +/- 0.02 min-1 and 64 +/- 2% at 0.013 +/- 0.001 min-1. One micromolar unlabeled vesamicol behaved similarly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Using the monoclonal antibody 15KI, we have studied, at the cellular and subcellular levels, the distribution of a 15 kDa proteolipid, identified as the subunit of mediatophore, a presynaptic membrane protein able to release acetylcholine when activated by calcium. Aside from the electric lobe, the antigen distribution in the brain of Torpedo paralleled that of the synaptic vesicle antigen SV2 and did not appear to be related to that of acetylcholine and choline acetyltransferase. The 15 kDa proteolipid antigen was therefore present in all nerve endings and not restricted to cholinergic ones. At the ultrastructural level, on cholinergic nerve endings, the antigen was detected associated to synaptic vesicles and, to a lesser extent, to the presynaptic plasma membrane. Indeed, considering the high sequence homology between the mediatophore subunit (Birman et al., 1990) and the proteolipid subunit of the vacuolar type H+ATPase, a major enzyme constituent of synaptic vesicles, this distribution was not surprising.

To determine whether antibody 15KI recognizes the vacuolar type H+ATPase, we chose a non neuronal cell type which possesses a high content of this enzyme, the kidney proton secreting epithelial cells. Indeed, antibody 15KI intensely labelled the apical plasma membrane of mitochondria rich epithelial cells in kidney tubules. A high density of the antigen was also found associated to intracellular membrane structures such as lysosomal multivesicular bodies, both in kidney epithelial cells and in electromotoneurons. The 15 kDa proteolipid antigen was associated with other vacuolar H+ATPase subunits in kidney membranes which was not the case in presynaptic plasma membranes. This illustrates that the 15 kDa proteolipid antigen is a constituent of two different protein complexes, which exhibit very different functional properties.  相似文献   


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