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1.
Two photoactivatable analogues of -conotoxin GI with the benzoylphenylalanine residue (Bpa) substituted for His10 or Tyr11 were synthesized using the method of solid-phase peptide synthesis. In addition, -conotoxin MI was chemically modified by placing an azidobenzoyl or a benzoylbenzoyl photo label at N of Gly1 or N of Lys10. All the photoactivatable analogues were purified by HPLC, their structures were confirmed by MALDI MS, and the label positions in their molecules were localized by MS of their trypsinolysis fragments. All the analogues interacted with the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) from Torpedo californica as efficiently as the native -conotoxins, with the differences in the inhibition constants being within one order of magnitude under the same conditions. [125I] Derivatives prepared from all the analogues retained the ability to be bound by AChR and were used in the photoinduced AChR crosslinking. All the AChR subunits were found to be crosslinked to the photoactivatable analogues, with the linking depending on both the chemical nature of label and its position in the -conotoxin molecule.  相似文献   

2.
Azidobenzoyl (AzBz) and benzoylbenzoyl (BzBz) derivatives of alpha-conotoxin MI and L-benzoylphenylalanine (Bpa) analogs of alpha-conotoxin GI were synthesized. All these compounds, similarly to native alpha-conotoxins, completely displaced the radioiodinated MI or GI from the membrane-bound nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of Torpedo californica. However, the GI(Bpa11) analog was considerably less potent than GI in competing with radioiodinated alpha-bungarotoxin (alphaBgt). Irradiation of iodinated AzBz derivatives bound to AChR resulted in labeling of all AChR subunits. The BzBz and Bpa derivatives gave lower levels of specific cross-linking but considerable labeling at additional sites that was enhanced, rather than suppressed, by an excess of native alpha-conotoxins or alphaBgt. Both equilibrium binding of benzophenone-derivatized alpha-conotoxins and their cross-linking could be totally abolished by physostigmine. The results obtained demonstrate that (a) specific binding sites for alpha-conotoxins and alphaBgt are overlapping but not identical, (b) each of the AChR subunits can be labeled with photoactivatable alpha-conotoxins and (c) enhancement of benzophenone-derivatized alpha-conotoxins cross-linking at additional (physostigmine-related) sites by alphaBgt or GI indicates that these antagonists induce structural alterations in the AChR outside their binding sites.  相似文献   

3.
We have tested the importance of charge interactions for alpha-conotoxin MI binding to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Ionic residues on alpha-conotoxin MI were altered by site-directed mutagenesis or by chemical modification. In physiological buffer, removal of charges at the N terminus, His-5, and Lys-10 had small (2-4-fold) effects on binding affinity to the mouse muscle AChR and the Torpedo AChR. It was also demonstrated that conotoxin had no effect on the conformational equilibrium of either receptor, as assessed by the effects of the noncompetitive antagonist proadifen on conotoxin binding and, conversely, the effect of conotoxin on the affinity of phencyclidine, proadifen, and ethidium. Conotoxin displayed higher binding affinity in low ionic strength buffer; neutralization of Lys-10 and the N terminus by acetylation blocked this affinity shift at the alphadelta site but not at the alphagamma site. It is concluded that Ctx residues Lys-10 and the N terminal interact with oppositely charged receptor residues only at the alphadelta site, and the two sites have distinct arrangements of charged residues. Ethidium fluorescence experiments demonstrated that conotoxin is formally competitive with a small cholinergic ligand, tetramethylammonium. Thus, alpha-conotoxin MI appears to interact with the portion of the binding site responsible for stabilizing agonist cations but does not do so with a cationic residue and is, consequently, incapable of inducing a conformational change.  相似文献   

4.
B H White  J B Cohen 《Biochemistry》1988,27(24):8741-8751
The hydrophobic, photoactivatable probe 3-trifluoromethyl-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine ([125I]TID) was used to label acetylcholine receptor rich membranes purified from Torpedo californica electric organ. All four subunits of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) were found to incorporate label, with the gamma-subunit incorporating approximately 4 times as much as each of the other subunits. Carbamylcholine, an agonist, and histrionicotoxin, a noncompetitive antagonist, both strongly inhibited labeling of all AChR subunits in a specific and dose-dependent manner. In contrast, the competitive antagonist alpha-bungarotoxin and the noncompetitive antagonist phencyclidine had only modest effects on [125I]TID labeling of the AChR. The regions of the AChR alpha-subunit that incorporate [125I]TID were mapped by Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease digestion. The carbamylcholine-sensitive site of labeling was localized to a 20-kDa V8 cleavage fragment that begins at Ser-173 and is of sufficient length to contain the three hydrophobic regions M1, M2, and M3. A 10-kDa fragment beginning at Asn-339 and containing the hydrophobic region M4 also incorporated [125I]TID but in a carbamylcholine-insensitive manner. Two further cleavage fragments, which together span about one-third of the alpha-subunit amino terminus, incorporated no detectable [125I]TID. The mapping results place constraints on suggested models of AChR subunit topology.  相似文献   

5.
alpha-Conotoxins, a family of small peptides from the venoms of the Conus marine moluscs, are selective, snake alpha-neurotoxin-competitive antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. A new alpha-conotoxin, SIA, has been purified, sequenced, and synthesized. Cross-linking with bivalent reagents and photoaffinity labeling of the acetylcholine receptor with alpha-conotoxin yield covalent adducts. Surprisingly, cross-linking to other subunits is considerably more efficient than to the alpha subunit. The relative efficiency of photoactivatable cross-linking to different subunits of the receptor is a function of placement of the photoactivatable group on the toxin. Since the structures of alpha-conotoxins can be solved by 2D NMR [see Pardi et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 5494-5508; Kobayashi et al. (1989) Biochemistry 28, 4853-4860], this family of toxins should provide a set of new ligands for probing the acetylcholine receptor with considerable precision.  相似文献   

6.
A J Schroit  J Madsen  A E Ruoho 《Biochemistry》1987,26(7):1812-1819
An isotopically labeled cross-linking reagent, succinimido 3-(3-[125I]iodo-4-azidophenyl)propionate, has been synthesized and coupled to 1-acyl-2-(aminocaproyl)phosphatidylcholine according to previously described procedures [Schroit, A. J., & Madsen, J. (1983) Biochemistry 22, 3617-3623]. 125I- and N3-labeled phosphatidylserine (125I-N3-PS) was produced from the phosphatidylcholine (PC) analogue by phospholipase D catalyzed base exchange in the presence of L-serine. These phospholipid analogues are photoactivatable, are labeled with 125I at high specific activity, completely incorporate into synthetic vesicles, and spontaneously transfer between membranes. When an excess of acceptor vesicles or red blood cells (RBC) was mixed with a population of donor vesicles containing the 125I-N3-phospholipids, approximately 40% of the analogues transferred to the acceptor population. After transfer in the dark to RBC, all of the 125I-N3-PC incorporated into the cells could be removed by washing with serum, whereas the 125I-N3-PS could not. After photolabeling of intact RBC, approximately 50% of the PC and 20% of the PS cross-linked to membrane proteins as determined by their insolubility in CHCl3/MeOH. Analysis of probe distribution by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed that 125I-N3-PS preferentially labeled a Mr 30,000 peptide which contained approximately 30% of the protein-bound label.  相似文献   

7.
By chemical modification of different lysine residues, benzoylbenzoyl (BzBz) groups were introduced into neurotoxin II Naja naja oxiana (NT-II), a short-chain snake venom alpha-neurotoxin, while p-benzoylphenylalanyl (Bpa) residue was incorporated in the course of peptide synthesis at position 11 of alpha-conotoxin G1, a neurotoxic peptide from marine snails. Although the crosslinking yields for iodinated BzBz derivatives of NT-II and for Bpa analogue of G1 to the membrane-bound Torpedo californica nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) are relatively low, the subunit labeling patterns confirm the earlier conclusions, derived from arylazide or diazirine photolabels, that alpha-neurotoxins and alpha-conotoxins bind at the subunit interfaces. Detecting the labeled alpha-subunit with iodinated Bpa analogue of G1 provided a direct proof for the contact between this subunit and alpha-conotoxin molecule.  相似文献   

8.
Positioning of mRNA on the 80S ribosome upstream the E site bound codon was studied using derivatives of nona- and dodecaribonucleotides containing the triplet UUU coding for Phe at the 3'-terminus, and a perfluorophenylazide cross-linker on either the first or the third nucleotide. Two sets of the mRNA analogues were used, with the photoactivatable groups on either the C5 atom of the uridine or the N7 atom of the guanosine. The modified nucleotides were directed to positions from -4 to -9 with respect to the first nucleotide of the P site bound codon by tRNA(Phe) cognate to the triplet UUU targeted to the P site. Mild UV-irradiation of ribosomecomplexes with tRNA(Phe) and mRNA analogues resulted in the cross-linking to the 40S subunits preferentially, mainly to the proteins. The principal target for the cross-linking was protein S26 in all cases. Location of the photoactivatable group on the nucleotide at position -4 lead also to the minor cross-linking to protein S3, and at position -6 to protein S14. In the absence of tRNA, all mRNA analogues cross-linked to protein S3.  相似文献   

9.
Biotinylated granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) analogues with different linkage chemistries and levels of conjugated biotin were synthesized by reacting recombinant human GM-CSF with sulfosuccinimidyl 6-biotinamidohexanoate or biotin hydrazide/1-[3-(dimethylamino)-propyl]-3-ethylcarbodiimide. These chemically reactive forms of biotin produced derivatives biotinylated at amine or carboxyl groups, respectively. Amine-derivatized analogues of 1.2 and 3.8 mol of biotin/mol of protein (N1-bGM-CSF and N4-bGM-CSF) and a carboxyl-modified analogue of 4.6 mol of biotin/mol of protein (C5-bGM-CSF) were synthesized. These analogues were compared to determine the effect of biotinylation on biological activity and GM-CSF receptor binding characteristics. The biotinylated proteins migrated with the same molecular weight as the native, unmodified protein as determined by SDS-PAGE and could be detected by Western blotting with alkaline phosphatase conjugated streptavidin, thus demonstrating the biotin linkage. All three analogues retained full agonist activity relative to the native protein (EC50 = 10-15 pM) when assayed for the stimulation of human bone marrow progenitor cell growth. Cell surface GM-CSF receptor binding was characterized by the binding of the analogues to human neutrophils, with detection by fluorescein-conjugated avidin and fluorescence-activated cell sorting. The N-bGM-CSFs demonstrated GM-CSF receptor specific binding that was displaceable by excess underivatized protein, with the detected fluorescence signal decreasing with increasing biotin to protein molar ratio. In contrast, C5-bGM-CSF binding above background fluorescence could not be detected using this system, suggesting that this derivative could bind to and activate the receptor, but not simultaneously bind fluorescein-conjugated avidin. The amine-derivatized biotinylated GM-CSF analogues retained biological activity, could specifically label cell surface receptors, and may be useful nonradioactive probes with which to study GM-CSF receptor cytochemistry and receptor modulation by flow cytometry.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Potential B epitopes and T-helper epitopes in the N-terminal extracellular domain of the alpha7-subunit of human acetylcholine receptor (AChR) were theoretically calculated in order to reveal peptides that can induce the formation of specific antibodies to this domain. Four peptides structurally corresponding to four alpha7-subunit regions containing 16-23 aa and three of their truncated analogues were synthesized. Rabbits were immunized with both free peptides and protein conjugates of their truncated analogues, and a panel of antibodies to various exposed regions of the N-terminal extracellular domain of the AChR alpha7-subunit was obtained. All of the four predicted peptides were shown to induce the production of antipeptide antibodies in free form, without conjugation with any protein carrier. The free peptides and the protein conjugates of truncated analogues induced the formation of almost equal levels of antibodies. Most of the obtained antisera contained antibodies that bind to the recombinant extracellular N-terminal domain of the rat AChR alpha7-subunit and do not react with the analogous domain of the alpha1-subunit of the ray Torpedo californica AChR.  相似文献   

12.
Potential B epitopes and T-helper epitopes in the N-terminal extracellular domain of the α7-subunit of human acetylchloline receptor (AChR) were theoretically calculated in order to reveal peptides that can induce the formation of specific antibodies to this domain. Four peptides structurally corresponding to four α7-subunit regions containing 16–23 aa and three of their truncated analogues were synthesized. Rabbits were immunized with both free peptides and protein conjugates of their truncated analogues, and a panel of antibodies to various exposed regions of the N-terminal extracellular domain of the AChR α7-subunit was obtained. All of the four predicted peptides were shown to induce the production of antipeptide antibodies in free form, without conjugation with any protein carrier. The free peptides and the protein conjugates of truncated analogues induced the formation of almost equal levels of antibodies. Most of the obtained antisera contained antibodies that bind to the recombinant extracellular N-terminal domain of the rat AChR α7-subunit and do not react with the analogous domain of the α1-subunit of the ray Torpedo californica AChR.  相似文献   

13.
The membrane-reactive, photoactivatable probe 125I-TID [3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)-3H-diazirine] was found to label the M protein of vesicular stomatitis virus about 40% as much as G protein in intact virions, in agreement with labeling studies with other probes. By analyzing limited tryptic digestion and specific chemical cleavage products, the label was essentially entirely localized within the first 19, and probably within the first 5 to 10, amino acid residues at the N terminus, identifying this short amphipathic segment as the likely site of interaction of M protein with the viral bilayer.  相似文献   

14.
Congenital myasthenic syndromes (CMSs) stem from genetic defects in endplate (EP)-specific presynaptic, synaptic, and postsynaptic proteins. The postsynaptic CMSs identified to date stem from a deficiency or kinetic abnormality of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). All CMSs with a kinetic abnormality of AChR, as well as many CMSs with a deficiency of AChR, have been traced to mutations in AChR-subunit genes. However, in a subset of patients with EP AChR deficiency, the genetic defect has remained elusive. Rapsyn, a 43-kDa postsynaptic protein, plays an essential role in the clustering of AChR at the EP. Seven tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs) of rapsyn subserve self-association, a coiled-coil domain binds to AChR, and a RING-H2 domain associates with beta-dystroglycan and links rapsyn to the subsynaptic cytoskeleton. Rapsyn self-association precedes recruitment of AChR to rapsyn clusters. In four patients with EP AChR deficiency but with no mutations in AChR subunits, we identify three recessive rapsyn mutations: one patient carries L14P in TPR1 and N88K in TPR3; two are homozygous for N88K; and one carries N88K and 553ins5, which frameshifts in TPR5. EP studies in each case show decreased staining for rapsyn and AChR, as well as impaired postsynaptic morphological development. Expression studies in HEK cells indicate that none of the mutations hinders rapsyn self-association but that all three diminish coclustering of AChR with rapsyn.  相似文献   

15.
The muscle-type nicotinic receptor has two distinguishable acetylcholine binding sites at the alpha-gamma and alpha-delta subunit interfaces; alpha-conotoxins can bind them selectively. Moreover, we previously reported that alpha-conotoxin MI can interact with Torpedo californica and Torpedo marmorata receptors showing that conotoxins can also detect receptors from different species of the same genus [L. Cortez, S.G. del Canto, F. Testai, M.B. de Jiménez Bonino, Conotoxin MI inhibits the acetylcholine binding site of the Torpedo marmorata receptor, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 295 (2002) 791-795]. Herein, to identify T. marmorata receptor regions involved in alpha-conotoxin MI binding, a photoactivatable reagent was used and labeled sites were mapped by enzymatic proteolysis, MALDI-TOF-MS and Edman degradation. alpha-Conotoxin MI binding determinants were found and studies revealed a second binding motif at the alpha/delta interface. A proposal for receptor-toxin interaction is discussed based on experimental results and docking studies.  相似文献   

16.
Mice with the H-2b major histocompatibility complex haplotype are high immune responders to nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChR), whereas mice with the H-2k haplotype are generally low responders. F1 progeny of C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice crossed with mice of most H-2k strains are high responders to AChR in standard conditions of testing helper T cell proliferation in vitro (4 X 10(5) lymph node cells/microwell, 1 wk after primary challenge in vivo). In contrast, the F1 progeny of AKR/J (H-2k) crossed with high responder (H-2b) strains (B6, A.BY, or C3H.SW) were all hyporesponsive to AChR when lymphocytes were tested at 4 X 10(5) cells/well. However, at a density of 1 X 10(6) or greater/well, a high level of antigen-specific responsiveness was demonstrable in the F1 hybrid lymphocytes. A shift from low to high responsiveness to AChR at high cell densities was observed also in the H-2b strain AKR.B6. Other strains previously demonstrated to be low responders to AChR did not become responsive to AChR when lymphocyte numbers were increased to 1.4 X 10(6)/well. The N2 generation yielded by backcrossing (AKR X B6)F1 mice to AKR/J were all low responders, whereas N2 progeny derived by backcrossing F1 to B6 were high or low responders in a ratio of approximately 1:1 (independent of their H-2 phenotype). Results consistent with this observation were obtained in (AKR X B6) F2 mice. These data suggest that at least one AKR/J gene outside of the H-2 complex exerts a hyporesponsive influence on the I-A-dependent helper T cell response to AChR in H-2b mice.  相似文献   

17.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are implicated in the regulation ofintracellular Ca2+-dependent processes in cells both in normal and pathological states, alpha-Conotoxins isolated from Conus snails venom are a valuable tool for the study of pharmacological properties and functional role of nAChRs. In the present study the alpha-conotoxin MII analogue with the additional tyrosine attached to the N terminus (Y0-MII) was prepared. Also we synthesized analogs with the N-terminal glycine residue labeled with the Bolton- Hunter reagent (BH-MII) or fluorestsein isothiocyanate (FITC-MII). Fluorescence microscopy studies of the neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells loaded with Ca2+ indicator Fura-2 or with Ca2+ and Na+ indicators Fluo-4 and SBFI were performed to examine effect of MII modification on its ability to inhibit nicotin-induced increases in intracellular free Ca2+ and Na+ concentrations ([Ca2+] and [Na+]i respectively). Monitoring of individual cell [Ca2+]i and [Na+]i signals revealed different kinetics of [Ca2+]i and [Na+]i rise and decay in responses to brief nicotine (Nic) applications (10-30 microM, 3-5 min), which indicates to different mechanisms of Ca2+ and Na+ homeostasis control in SH-SY5Y cells. MII inhibited in concentration-dependent manner the both [Ca2+]i and [Na+]i increase induced by Nic. Additional tyrosine in the Y0-MII or, especially, more sizeable label in FITC-MII significantly reduced the inhibitory effect of MII. Whereas the efficiency of the Ca2+ response inhibition by BH-MII was found to be close to the efficiency of its inhibition by natural alpha-conotoxin MII, radioiodinated derivatives BH-MII can be used in radioligand assay.  相似文献   

18.
The epitopes for twelve monoclonal antibodies against the cytoplasmic side of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha subunit were precisely mapped using over 300 continuously overlapping synthetic peptides attached on poly(ethylene) rods. mAb cross-reactive between Torpedo and human AChR generally bound to the homologous peptides from both species. Epitopes 4-10-residues long were identified. One mAb could bind to either arm on both sides of a beta-turn structure. Five mAb bound to a very-immunogenic cytoplasmic epitope on alpha 373-380 (VICE-alpha). Three of the mAb against VICE-alpha were earlier found to cross-react with non-AChR protein(s), present in thymomas from myasthenia gravis patients but absent in thymomas from non-myasthenics. Since VICE-alpha has a potentially crucial pathogenic role, the antigenic role of each residue within it was subsequently studied by 55 analogues, most having single amino acid substitutions. All the mAb against VICE-alpha bound similarly but not identically to the analogues, thus explaining their known binding heterogeneity. Lys373 proved indispensable for mAb binding. Ile376, Glu377, Gly378 and Lys380 were quite critical, while Ser374, Ala375 and Val379 seemed rather inactive. These data should prove instructive in searches for VICE-alpha-like epitopes carrying autoantigens with potential involvement in myasthenia gravis and should further expand the applications of the anti-(AChR) mAb in AChR studies.  相似文献   

19.
alpha-Conotoxins, peptide neurotoxins from poisonous marine snails of the genus Conus that highly specifically block nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) of various types, are reviewed. Preliminarily, the structural organization of AChRs of the muscular and neuronal types, their involvement in physiological processes, and their role in various diseases are briefly discussed. In this connection, the necessity of quantitative determination of AChR subtypes using neurotoxins and other approaches is substantiated. The chemical structure, spatial organization, and specificity of alpha-conotoxins are mainly discussed, taking into consideration the recent results on the ability of alpha-conotoxins to interact with muscular or neuronal hetero- and homooligomeric AChRs exhibiting a high species specificity. Particular emphasis is placed upon a thorough characterization of the surfaces of interaction of alpha-conotoxins with AChRs using synthetic analogues of alpha-conotoxins, mutations in AChRs, and pairwise mutations in both alpha-conotoxins and AChRs. The discovery in 2001 of the acetylcholine-binding protein from the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis and the determination of its crystalline structure led to rapid progress in understanding the structural organization of ligand-binding domains of AChRs with which alpha-conotoxins also interact. We discuss the interaction of various alpha-conotoxins with acetylcholine-binding proteins, the recently reported X-ray structure of the complex of the acetylcholine-binding protein from Aplysia californica with the alpha-conotoxin analogue PnIA, and the application of this structure to the modeling of complexes of alpha-conotoxins with various AChRs.  相似文献   

20.
A J Dowding  Z W Hall 《Biochemistry》1987,26(20):6372-6381
We have isolated and characterized 12 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that block the binding of alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BuTx) to the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of Torpedo californica. Two of the mAbs block alpha-BuTx binding completely; the other 10 inhibit only about 50% of the binding. The mAbs that partially inhibit alpha-BuTx binding can be divided into two groups by examination of the additive effect of pairs of mAbs on toxin binding, and by analysis of competition between mAbs for binding to the AChR. These two groups of mAbs, which we have termed A and B, appear to recognize different toxin-binding sites on the same receptor. A and B mAbs were used to determine the kinetic and pharmacological properties of the two sites. The site recognized by A mAbs binds alpha-BuTx with a forward rate constant of 0.98 X 10(5) M-1 s-1, d-tubocurarine (dTC) with a KD of (6.8 +/- 0.3) X 10(-8) M, and pancuronium with a KD of (1.9 +/- 1.0) X 10(-9) M. The site recognized by B mAbs binds alpha-BuTx with a forward rate constant of 9.3 X 10(5) M-1 s-1, dTC with a KD of (4.6 +/- 0.3) X 10(-6) M, and pancuronium with a KD of (9.3 +/- 0.8) X 10(-6) M. Binding of A and B mAbs to the AChR was variably inhibited by nicotinic cholinergic agonists and antagonists, and by alpha-conotoxin. The observed pattern of inhibition is consistent with the relative affinity of the two sites for antagonists as given above but also indicates that the mAbs recognize a diversity of epitopes within each site.  相似文献   

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