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1.
Scorpion toxins, the basic miniproteins of scorpion venom, stimulated the passive uptake of Na+ and Ca2+ in chick embryo heart cells. Half-maximum stimulation was obtained for 20-30 nM Na+ and 40-50 nM Ca2+. Scorpion toxin-activated Na+ and Ca2+ uptakes were fully inhibited by tetrodotoxin, a specific inhibitor of the action potential Na+ ionophore in excitable membranes. Half-maximum inhibition was obtained with the same concentration of tetrodotoxin (10 nM) for both Na+ and Ca2+. Scorpion toxin-stimulated Ca2+ uptake was dependent on extracellular Na+ concentration and was not inhibited by Ca2+ channel blocking drugs which are inactive on heart cell action potential. Thus, in heart cells scorpion toxin affects the passive Ca2+ transport, which is coupled to passive Na+ ionphore. Other results suggest that (1) tetrodotoxin and scorpion toxin bind to different sites of the sarcolemma and (2) binding of scorpion toxin to its specific sites may unmask latent tetrodotoxin - sensitive fast channels.  相似文献   

2.
The voltage-sensitive sodium channel of rat brain synaptosomes was solubilized with sodium cholate. The solubilized sodium channel migrated on a sucrose density gradient with an apparent S20,w of approximately 12 S, retained [3H]saxitoxin ([3H]STX) binding activity that was labile at 36 degrees C but no longer bound 125I-labeled scorpion toxin (125I-ScTX). Following reconstitution into phosphatidylcholine vesicles, the channel regained 125I-ScTX binding and thermal stability of [3H]STX binding. Approximately 50% of the [3H]STX binding activity and 58% of 125I-ScTX binding activity were recovered after reconstitution. The reconstituted sodium channel bound STX and ScTX with KD values of 5 and 10 nM, respectively. Under depolarized conditions, veratridine enhanced the binding of 125I-ScTX with a K0.5 of 20 microM. These KD and K0.5 values are similar to those of the native synaptosome sodium channel. 125I-ScTX binding to the reconstituted sodium channel, as with the native channel, was voltage dependent. The KD for 125I-ScTX increased with depolarization. This voltage dependence was used to demonstrate that the reconstituted channel transports Na+. Activation of sodium channels by veratridine under conditions expected to cause hyperpolarization of the reconstituted vesicles increased 125I-ScTX binding 3-fold. This increased binding was blocked by STX with K0.5 = 5 nM. These data indicate that reconstituted sodium channels can transport Na+ and hyperpolarize the reconstituted vesicles. Thus, incorporation of solubilized synaptosomal sodium channels into phosphatidylcholine vesicles results in recovery of toxin binding and action at each of the three neurotoxin receptor sites and restoration of Na+ transport by the reconstituted channels.  相似文献   

3.
Na+ currents were measured in myelinated frog nerve fibres in the presence of nanomolar concentrations of tetrodotoxin (TTX) or saxitoxin (STX) in the extracellular solution. The Na+ currents declined during a train of depolarizing pulses if the fibre was held at hyperpolarizing potentials between the pulses. At a pulse frequency of 0.8 Hz, the peak Na+ currents were reduced to 70 or 60% of the initial value in 9.3 nM TTX and 3.5 nM STX solutions, respectively. A decline of Na+ currents was also observed in two-pulse experiments. The peak Na+ current during a second test pulse did not depend on the duration (0.2 to 12 ms) of the first pulse. It decreased with increasing interval between the pulses, reached a minimum and increased again. The results are interpreted with a use-dependent blockage of Na+ channels by TTX or STX at negative holding potentials. The effects were described quantitatively, assuming a fast affinity increase of toxin receptors at Na+ channels triggered by Na+ activation followed by slow toxin binding to channels and relaxation of the receptor affinity.  相似文献   

4.
(1) Voltage-clamped nerve fibres of the frog Rana esculenta were treated with periodate in the extracellular solution. (2) Periodate treatment irreversibly reduced the effect of tetrodotoxin (TTX) on the Na+ currents. (3) The effect of saxitoxin (STX) was also reduced but less than that of TTX. (4) The presence of STX during the application of periodate to the nerve fibre almost completely prevented the effect of the chemical reagent on the TTX sensitivity of the Na+ channels. (5) The reduction of the TTX effect is not due to the reaction of small amounts of periodate with the diol group of this toxin, because the effect was seen after prolonged washing with reagent-free Ringer solution with or without high amounts of ribose. (6) Carboxyl groups present in the Na+ channel seem to be quite important for the binding of TTX and STX. Periodate modifies several amino acid side chains, however, it does not attack carboxyl groups in a peptide chain. Thus, these results suggest that periodate modifies a further group critically involved in the binding of TTX and STX.  相似文献   

5.
Y Yanagawa  T Abe  M Satake  S Odani  J Suzuki  K Ishikawa 《Biochemistry》1988,27(17):6256-6262
A novel toxin, tentatively named conotoxin GS (CGS), has been isolated from a marine snail, Conus geographus. CGS was found to exist as a single polypeptide chain, consisting of 34 amino acid residues, cross-linked by three disulfide bonds. Its amino acid sequence was shown to be Ala-Cys-Ser-Gly-Arg-Gly-Ser-Arg-Cys-Hyp-Hyp-Gln-Cys-Cys-Met-Gly-Leu-Arg- Cys-Gly - Arg-Gly-Asn-Pro-Gln-Lys-Cys-Ile-Gly-Ala-His-Gla-Asp-Val. In competition experiments, CGS inhibited the bindings of [3H]Lys-tetrodotoxin ([3H]Lys-TTX) and [3H]propionylconotoxin GIIIA to Electrophorus electricus electroplax membranes, with Ki values of 34 nM and 24 nM, respectively. The toxin inhibited the binding of [3H]Lys-TTX (1 nM) to rat skeletal muscle homogenates with an IC50 value of 880 nM but showed very little effect on this binding to the rat brain P2 fraction at 10 microM. These binding studies indicate that CGS belongs to the same group of Na channel inhibitors as TTX, STX (saxitoxin), and mu-conotoxins. Although CGS, like the mu-conotoxins, is a pharmacological probe for distinguishing between neuronal and muscle Na channel subtypes, the homology in the sequences of CGS and mu-conotoxins is very limited.  相似文献   

6.
The guanidinium toxin-induced inhibition of the current through voltage-dependent sodium channels was examined for batrachotoxin-modified channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers that carry no net charge. To ascertain whether a net negative charge exists in the vicinity of the toxin-binding site, we studied the channel closures induced by tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) over a wide range of [Na+]. These toxins carry charges of +1 and +2, respectively. The frequency and duration of the toxin-induced closures are voltage dependent. The voltage dependence was similar for STX and TTX, independent of [Na+], which indicates that the binding site is located superficially at the extracellular surface of the sodium channel. The toxin dissociation constant, KD, and the rate constant for the toxin-induced closures, kc, varied as a function of [Na+]. The Na+ dependence was larger for STX than for TTX. Similarly, the addition of tetraethylammonium (TEA+) or Zn++ increased KD and decreased kc more for STX than for TTX. These differential effects are interpreted to arise from changes in the electrostatic potential near the toxin-binding site. The charges giving rise to this potential must reside on the channel since the bilayers had no net charge. The Na+ dependence of the ratios KDSTX/KDTTX and kcSTX/kcTTX was used to estimate an apparent charge density near the toxin-binding site of about -0.33 e X nm-2. Zn++ causes a voltage-dependent block of the single-channel current, as if Zn++ bound at a site within the permeation path, thereby blocking Na+ movement. There was no measurable interaction between Zn++ at its blocking site and STX or TTX at their binding site, which suggests that the toxin-binding site is separate from the channel entrance. The separation between the toxin-binding site and the Zn++ blocking site was estimated to be at least 1.5 nm. A model for toxin-induced channel closures is proposed, based on conformational changes in the channel subsequent to toxin binding.  相似文献   

7.
The blockage of skeletal muscle sodium channels by tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) have been studied in CHO cells permanently expressing rat Nav1.4 channels. Tonic and use-dependent blockage were analyzed in the framework of the ion-trapped model. The tonic affinity (26.6 nM) and the maximum affinity (7.7 nM) of TTX, as well as the "on" and "off" rate constants measured in this preparation, are in remarkably good agreement with those measured for Nav1.2 expressed in frog oocytes, indicating that the structure of the toxin receptor of Nav1.4 and Nav1.2 channels are very similar and that the expression method does not have any influence on the pore properties of the sodium channel. The higher affinity of STX for the sodium channels (tonic and maximum affinity of 1.8 nM and 0.74 nM respectively) is explained as an increase on the "on" rate constant (approximately 0.03 s(-1) nM(-1)), compared to that of TTX (approximately 0.003 s(-1) nM(-1)), while the "off" rate constant is the same for both toxins (approximately 0.02 s(-1)). Estimations of the free-energy differences of the toxin-channel interaction indicate that STX is bound in a more external position than TTX. Similarly, the comparison of the toxins free energy of binding to a ion-free, Na(+)- and Ca(2+)-occupied channel, is consistent with a binding site in the selectivity filter for Ca(2+) more external than for Na(+). This data may be useful in further attempts at sodium-channel pore modeling.  相似文献   

8.
The rat brain IIa (BrIIa) Na channel alpha-subunit and the brain beta 1 subunit were coexpressed in Xenopus oocytes, and peak whole-oocyte Na current (INa) was measured at a test potential of -10 mV. Hyperpolarization of the holding potential resulted in an increased affinity of STX and TTX rested-state block of BrIIa Na channels. The apparent half-block concentration (ED50) for STX of BrIIa current decreased with hyperpolarizing holding potentials (Vhold). At Vhold of -100 mV, the ED50 was 2.1 +/- 0.4 nM, and the affinity increased to a ED50 of 1.2 +/- 0.2 nM with Vhold of -140 mV. In the absence of toxin, the peak current amplitude was the same for all potentials negative to -90 mV, demonstrating that all of the channels were in a closed conformation and maximally available to open in this range of holding potentials. The Woodhull model (1973) was used to describe the increase of the STX ED50 as a function of holding potential. The equivalent electrical distance of block (delta) by STX was 0.18 from the extracellular milieu when the valence of STX was fixed to +2. Analysis of the holding potential dependence of TTX block yielded a similar delta when the valence of TTX was fixed to +1. We conclude that the guanidinium toxin site is located partially within the transmembrane electric field. Previous site-directed mutagenesis studies demonstrated that an isoform-specific phenylalanine in the BrIIa channel is critical for high affinity toxin block.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The marine guanidinium toxins, saxitoxin (STX) and tetrodotoxin (TTX), have played crucial roles in the study of voltage-gated Na+ channels. Because they have similar actions, sizes, and functional groups, they have been thought to associate with the channel in the same manner, and early mutational studies supported this idea. Recent experiments by. Biophys. J. 67:2305-2315) have suggested that the toxins bind differently to the isoform-specific domain I Phe/Tyr/Cys location. In the adult skeletal muscle Na+ channel isoform (microliter), we compared the effects on both TTX and STX affinities of mutations in eight positions known to influence toxin binding. The results permitted the assignment of energies contributed by each amino acid to the binding reaction. For neutralizing mutations of Asp400, Glu755, and Lys1237, all thought to be part of the selectivity filter of the channel, the loss of binding energy was identical for the two toxins. However, the loss of binding energy was quite different for vestibule residues considered to be more superficial. Specifically, STX affinity was reduced much more by neutralizations of Glu758 and Asp1532. On the other hand, mutation of Tyr401 to Cys reduced TTX binding energy twice as much as it reduced STX binding energy. Kinetic analysis suggested that all outer vestibule residues tested interacted with both toxins early in the binding reaction (consistent with larger changes in the binding than unbinding rates) before the transition state and formation of the final bound complex. We propose a revised model of TTX and STX binding in the Na+ channel outer vestibule in which the toxins have similar interactions at the selectivity filter, TTX has a stronger interaction with Tyr401, and STX interacts more strongly with the more extracellular residues.  相似文献   

10.
Saxitoxin (STX) has proved useful in the isolation and characterization of vertebrate and invertebrate voltage-operated sodium channels. Membrane extracts from the nervous system of the cockroach Periplaneta americana contain a saturable component of specific [3H]STX binding. Scatchard analysis yields a KD of 0.84 nM, similar to that (3.0 nM) determined in electrophysiological studies on axons in the same tissue (Sattelle et al., 1979). The maximum number of binding sites, Bmax (8.25 pmol/mg protein), was higher than previously observed. The specific binding component was blocked by STX and tetrodotoxin (TTX), but not by scorpion (Leiurus quinquestriatus) venom, aconitine, veratridine, sea anemone toxin and deltamethrin, which act at different sites on the channel molecule. Unlabelled STX samples prepared from different sources (Mytilus, Saxidomus and Gonyaulax) were all effective as inhibitors of [3H]STX binding. Radiation inactivation was employed to determine the molecular target size of the [3H]STX binding molecule in membranes prepared from the cockroach nervous system. By this means Mr = 171,400 ± 25,000 was estimated for the insect sodium channel.  相似文献   

11.
Biophysical evidence has placed the binding site for the naturally occurring marine toxins tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) in the external mouth of the Na+ channel ion permeation pathway. We developed a molecular model of the binding pocket for TTX and STX, composed of antiparallel beta-hairpins formed from peptide segments of the four S5-S6 loops of the voltage-gated Na+ channel. For TTX the guanidinium moiety formed salt bridges with three carboxyls, while two toxin hydroxyls (C9-OH and C10-OH) interacted with a fourth carboxyl on repeats I and II. This alignment also resulted in a hydrophobic interaction with an aromatic ring of phenylalanine or tyrosine residues for the brainII and skeletal Na+ channel isoforms, but not with the cysteine found in the cardiac isoform. In comparison to TTX, there was an additional interaction site for STX through its second guanidinium group with a carboxyl on repeat IV. This model satisfactorily reproduced the effects of mutations in the S5-S6 regions and the differences in affinity by various toxin analogs. However, this model differed in important ways from previously published models for the outer vestibule and the selectivity region of the Na+ channel pore. Removal of the toxins from the pocket formed by the four beta-hairpins revealed a structure resembling a funnel that terminated in a narrowed region suitable as a candidate for the selectivity filter of the channel. This region contained two carboxyls (Asp384 and Glu942) that substituted for molecules of water from the hydrated Na+ ion. Simulation of mutations in this region that have produced Ca2+ permeation of the Na+ channel created a site with three carboxyls (Asp384, Glu942, and Glu1714) in proximity.  相似文献   

12.
The single-channel blocking kinetics of tetrodotoxin (TTX), saxitoxin (STX), and several STX derivatives were measured for various Na-channel subtypes incorporated into planar lipid bilayers in the presence of batrachotoxin. The subtypes studied include Na channels from rat skeletal muscle and rat brain, which have high affinity for TTX/STX, and Na channels from denervated rat skeletal muscle and canine heart, which have about 20-60-fold lower affinity for these toxins at 22 degrees C. The equilibrium dissociation constant of toxin binding is an exponential function of voltage (e-fold per 40 mV) in the range of -60 to +60 mV. This voltage dependence is similar for all channel subtypes and toxins, indicating that this property is a conserved feature of channel function for batrachotoxin-activated channels. The decrease in binding affinity for TTX and STX in low-affinity subtypes is due to a 3-9-fold decrease in the association rate constant and a 4-8-fold increase in the dissociation rate constant. For a series of STX derivatives, the association rate constant for toxin binding is approximately an exponential function of net toxin charge in membranes of neutral lipids, implying that there is a negative surface potential due to fixed negative charges in the vicinity of the toxin receptor. The magnitude of this surface potential (-35 to -43 mV at 0.2 M NaCl) is similar for both high- and low-affinity subtypes, suggesting that the lower association rate of toxin binding to toxin-insensitive subtypes is not due to decreased surface charge but rather to a slower protein conformational step. The increased rates of toxin dissociation from insensitive subtypes can be attributed to the loss of a few specific bonding interactions in the binding site such as loss of a hydrogen bond with the N-1 hydroxyl group of neosaxitoxin, which contributes about 1 kcal/mol of intrinsic binding energy.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of extracellular saxitoxin (STX) and tetrodotoxin (TTX) on gating current (IgON) were studied in voltage clamped crayfish giant axons. At a holding potential (VH) of -90 mV, integrated gating charge (QON) was found to be 56% suppressed when 200 nM STX was added to the external solution, and 75% suppressed following the addition of 200 nM TTX. These concentrations of toxin are sufficiently high to block greater than 99% of sodium channels. A smaller suppression of IgON was observed when 1 nM STX was used (KD = 1-2 nM STX). The suppression of IgON by external toxin was found to be hold potential dependent, with only minimal suppression observed at the most hyperpolarized hold potentials, -140 to -120 mV. The maximal effect of these toxins on IgON was observed at hold potentials where the QON vs. VH plot was found to be steepest, -100 to -80 mV. The suppression of IgON induced by TTX is partially relieved following the removal of fast inactivation by intracellular treatment with N-bromoacetamide (NBA). The effect of STX and TTX on IgON is equivalent to a hyperpolarizing shift in the steady state inactivation curve, with 200 nM STX and 200 nM TTX inducing shifts of 4.9 +/- 1.7 mV and 10.0 +/- 2.1 mV, respectively. Our results are consistent with a model where the binding of toxin displaces a divalent cation from a negatively charged site near the external opening of the sodium channel, thereby producing a voltage offset sensed by the channel gating apparatus.  相似文献   

14.
The use of sea anemone toxin, veratridine and scorpion toxin which specifically interact with the gating system of the sodium channel and maintain the channel in an open conformation has permitted a study of the mechanism of transport of monovalent cations through the selectivity filter of this channel. The initial rate of 22Na+ influx through the tetrodotoxin-sensitive Na+ channels of excitable cells is dependent upon the external concentrations of Na+ and Na+-substitutes with the following properties. (a) It is saturable at high Na+ concentrations and increases with the external Na+ concentration in a cooperative manner (nH = 1.6). (b) At low external Na+ concentrations (1 mM), it is activated and then inhibited by increasing external concentrations of monovalent cations such as Li+, guanidinium, hydrazinium, hydroxylamine and K+. The activating effect of these cations disappears at higher external Na+ concentrations (10 mM). The experimental data are consistent with a model involving at least two allosteric cation-binding sites per Na+ channel. The binding of monovalent cations to Na+ sites is characterized by a high positive homotropic cooperativity. Most of the work describes the properties of the Na+ channel in neuroblastoma cells. The mechanism has also been shown to be valid for excitable cells of other types and origins.  相似文献   

15.
The cell line C9 used in this paper has a resting potential of --50 mV (+/- 10 mV) but is unable to generate an action potential upon electrical stimulation. The cell membrane has receptors for the selectivity filter toxin tetrodotoxin as well as for the gating system toxins, veratridine, scorpion toxin and sea anemone toxin. The Na+ channel which remains silent to electrical stimulation in the absence of toxins can be chemically activated by the gating system toxins. This has been demonstarted by electrophysiological techniques and by 22Na+ flux studies. The electrophysiological approach has shown that the sea anemone toxin is able to induce a spontaneous slow-wave activity inhibited by tetrodotoxin. 22Na+ influx analyses have shown that veratridine and the sea anemone toxin produce an important increase of the initial rate of 22Na+ influx into the C9 cell. The stimulation of 22Na+ entry by these gating system toxins is similar to that found using spiking neuroblastoma cells. Veratridine and the sea anemone toxin on one hand as well as veratridine and the scorpion toxin on the other hand are synergistic in their action to stabilize an open and highly permeable form of the sodium channel. Stimulation of 22Na+ entry into the cell through the sodium channel maintained open by the gating system neurotoxins is completely suppressed by tetrodotoxin.  相似文献   

16.
bTyrosine 401 of the skeletal muscle isoform (mu 1) of the rat muscle Na channel is an important determinant of high affinity block by tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) in Na-channel isoforms. In mammalian heart Na channels, this residue is substituted by cysteine, which results in low affinity for TTX/STX and enhanced sensitivity to block by Zn2+ and Cd2+. In this study, we investigated the molecular basis for high affinity block of Na channels by STX and divalent cations by measuring inhibition of macroscopic Na+ current for a series of point mutations at residue Tyr401 of the rat mu 1 Na channel expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Substitution of Tyr401 by Gly, Ala, Ser, Cys, Asp, His, Trp, and Phe produced functional Na+ currents without major perturbation of gating or ionic selectivity. High affinity block by STX and neosaxitoxin (NEO) with Ki values in the range of 2.6-18 nM required Tyr, Phe, or Trp, suggestive of an interaction between an aromatic ring and a guanidinium group of the toxin. The Cys mutation resulted in a 7- and 23-fold enhancement of the dissociation rate of STX and NEO, respectively, corresponding to rapid toxin dissociation rates of cardiac Na channels. High affinity block by Zn2+ (Ki = 8-23 microM) required Cys, His, or Asp, three residues commonly found to coordinate directly with Zn2+ in metalloproteins. For the Cys mutant of mu 1 and also for the cardiac isoform Na channel (rh1) expressed in the L6 rat muscle cell line, inhibition of macroscopic Na+ conductance by Zn2+ reached a plateau at 85-90% inhibition, suggesting the presence of a substate current. The Asp mutant also displayed enhanced affinity for inhibition of conductance by Ca2+ (Ki = 0.3 mM vs approximately 40 mM in wild type), but block by Ca2+ was incomplete, saturating at approximately 69% inhibition. In contrast, Cd2+ completely blocked macroscopic current in the Cys mutant and the L6 cell line. These results imply that the magnitude of substate current depends on the particular residue at position 401 and the species of divalent cation. The His mutant also exhibited enhanced sensitivity to block by H+ with a pKa of approximately 7.5 for the His imidazole group. Our findings provide further evidence that residue 401 of mu 1 is located within the outer vestibule of the Na channel but external to the single-filing region for permeant ions.  相似文献   

17.
We have studied the development of the action potential Na+ channels in PC12 cells, an established line that has been useful as a model for neuronal differentiation. In continuous culture PC12 cells, although electrically inexcitable, nevertheless have a low level of Na+ channels as judged by the increase in 22Na+ uptake in the presence of veratridine and scorpion toxin. These two neurotoxins have been shown to promote activation of Na+ channels in a variety of electrically excitable cells. Following treatment with nerve growth factor (NGF), conditions which induce differentiation to an electrically excitably neuronal-cell type, the neurotoxin-activated 22Na+ uptake increases approximately 12-fold, on a per cell basis, reaching a maximum in 12-16 days. The dose-response curves for veratridine and scorpion toxin are unchanged by NGF treatment (K0.5 for veratridine, 18-14 microM; K0.5 for scorpion toxin, 120-96 nM). Na+ channels in both undifferentiated and differentiated cells are tetrodotoxin sensitive and NGF treatment has no effect on the inhibition constant (Ki, 10-12 nM). Na+ channel sites were measured directly by the specific binding of [3H]saxitoxin. In NGF-treated cells, the saxitoxin receptor density reaches 154 fmol/mg protein (Kd, 1.3 nM), a level comparable to other excitable cells. Levels in control cells were too low to measure accurately. These findings show that NGF treatment of PC12 cells leads to a substantial increase in the expression of neurotoxin-sensitive Na+ channels. Furthermore, these channels are pharmacologically similar, if not identical, to those which exist in undifferentiated cells and therefore do not appear to result from the conversion of preexisting channels.  相似文献   

18.
Interaction of Li+ with the voltage-dependent Na+ channel has been analyzed in neuroblastoma X glioma hybrid cells. The cells were able to generate action potentials in media containing Li+ instead of Na+. The uptake of Li+ into the hybrid cells was investigated for the pharmacological analysis of Li+ permeation through voltage-dependent Na+ channels. Veratridine and aconitine increased the uptake of Li+ to the same degree (EC50 30 microM). This increase was blocked by tetrodotoxin (IC50 20 nM). Veratridine and aconitine did not act synergistically; however, the veratridine-stimulated influx was further enhanced by the toxin of the scorpion Leiurus quinquestriatus (EC50 0.06 micrograms/ml). This stimulation was also blocked by tetrodotoxin. Thus, the voltage-dependent Na+ channel of the hybrid cells accepts both Li+ and Na+ in a similar manner.  相似文献   

19.
22Na influx was measured in the established muscle cell line L-6 and in primary rat skeletal muscle cultures following activation of sodium channels by veratridine and sea anemone toxin II. Inhibition of the activated channels by tetrodotoxin (TTX) was analyzed with computer-assisted fits to one- or two-site binding models. In L-6 cultures, two inhibitable sodium channel populations were resolved at all ages in culture: a TTX-sensitive (K = 0.6-5.0 X 10(-8) M) and an insensitive population (Ki = 3.3-4.9 X 10(-6) M). In primary rat muscle cultures, the sensitivity of the toxin-stimulated channels to TTX changed with time in culture. In 4-day-old cultures, a single sodium channel population was detected using TTX (Ki = 2.4 X 10(-7)M). A single population was also found in 6-day-old cultures (Ki = 5.3 X 10(-7) M). By day 7 in culture, the inhibition of 22Na influx by TTX could be resolved into two components with high- and low-affinity sites for the toxin (Ki = 1.3 X 10(-9) M and 9.6 X 10(-7) M). We conclude that a single, toxin-activated sodium channel population with low affinity for TTX exists at early stages, whereas a second, high-affinity population evolves with time in primary rat muscle cultures. The expression of a high-affinity site apparently does not require ongoing neuronal involvement and may reflect an intrinsic property of the muscle cells.  相似文献   

20.
The actions of tetrodotoxin (TTX) and saxitoxin (STX) in normal water and in deuterium oxide (D2O) have been studied in frog myelinated nerve. Substitution of D2O for H2O in normal Ringer's solution has no effect on the potency of TTX in blocking action potentials but increases the potency of STX by approximately 50%. Under voltage clamp, the steady-state inhibition of sodium currents by 1 nM STX is doubled in D2O as a result of a halving of the rate of dissociation of STX from the sodium channel; the rate of block by STX is not measurably changed by D2O. Neither steady-state inhibition nor the on- or off-rate constants of TTX are changed by D2O substitution. The isotopic effects on STX binding are observed less than 10 min after the toxin has been added to D2O, thus eliminating the possibility that slow-exchange (t 1/2 greater than 10 h) hydrogen-binding sites on STX are involved. The results are consistent with a hypothesis that attributes receptor-toxin stabilization to isotopic changes of hydrogen bonding; this interpretation suggests that hydrogen bonds contribute more to the binding of STX than to that of TTX at the sodium channel.  相似文献   

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