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1.
The postsynaptic glycine receptor (GlyR) is a major inhibitory chloride channel protein in the central nervous system. The affinity-purified receptor contains polypeptides of 48 kDa, 58 kDa, and 93 kDa. The 48-kDa (alpha) and 58 kDa (beta) subunits span the postsynaptic membrane in a pentameric arrangement to form the anion channel of the receptor. The 93-kDa polypeptide is cytoplasmically localized and may have an anchoring function. Molecular cloning revealed that different structural characteristics are shared by the membrane-spanning subunits of the GlyR and those of other ligand-gated ion channel proteins. Developmental regulation of the GlyR is characterized by alterations in antagonist binding, heterogeneity of alpha subunits, and increased levels of the 93-kDa polypeptide. Glycine receptor function can be reconstituted by expression of cloned alpha subunits in heterologous cell systems. Positive charges found at the presumed mouths of the GlyR channel appear to be important determinants of ion selectivity. These data establish the anion-conducting GlyR as a homolog of other ligand-gated ion channel proteins and suggest that the diversity of these channels originates from divergent evolution of a primordial channel protein early in phylogeny.  相似文献   

2.
The inhibitory postsynaptic glycine receptor (GlyR) of rat spinal cord is an oligomeric transmembrane protein which forms an agonist-gated anion channel. Expression in Xenopus oocytes of its mol. wt 48,000 subunit generated glycine-gated chloride channels which were analysed by voltage clamp. The agonist and antagonist response properties as well as the desensitization characteristics of these 48 kd subunit receptors resembled GlyRs expressed from spinal cord poly(A)+ RNA. These data indicate that the 48 kd subunit is capable of assembling into a functional receptor homo-oligomer which displays the pharmacology characteristic of the spinal cord GlyR.  相似文献   

3.
V Schmieden  J Kuhse    H Betz 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(6):2025-2032
The inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR) is a pentameric chloride channel protein which mediates postsynaptic inhibition in the mammalian central nervous system. In spinal cord, different GlyR isoforms originate from the sequential expression of developmentally regulated variants of the ligand binding alpha subunit. Here, neonatal alpha 2 and adult alpha 1 subunits are shown to generate GlyRs with distinct agonist activation profiles upon heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Whereas alpha 1 receptors are efficiently gated by beta-alanine and taurine, alpha 2 GlyRs show only a low relative response to these agonists, which also display a reduced sensitivity to inhibition by the glycinergic antagonist strychnine. Construction of an alpha 2/alpha 1 subunit chimera and site-directed mutagenesis of the extracellular region of the alpha 1 sequence identified amino acid positions 111 and 212 as important determinants of taurine activation. Our results indicate the existence of distinct subsites for agonists on alpha 1 and alpha 2 GlyRs and suggest that the ligand binding pocket of these receptor proteins is formed from discontinuous domains of their extracellular region.  相似文献   

4.
The divalent cation Zn2+ has been shown to regulate inhibitory neurotransmission in the mammalian CNS by affecting the activation of the strychnine-sensitive glycine receptor (GlyR). In spinal neurons and cells expressing recombinant GlyRs, low micromolar (<10 microM) concentrations of Zn2+ enhance glycine currents, whereas higher concentrations (>10 microM) have an inhibitory effect. Mutational studies have localized the Zn2+ binding sites mediating allosteric potentiation and inhibition of GlyRs in distinct regions of the N-terminal extracellular domain of the GlyR alpha-subunits. Here, we examined the Zn2+ sensitivity of different mutations within the agonist binding site of the homomeric alpha(1)-subunit GlyR upon heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. This revealed that six substitutions within the ligand-binding pocket result in a total loss of Zn2+ inhibition. Furthermore, substitution of the positively charged residues arginine 65 and arginine 131 by alanine (alpha(1)(R65A), alpha(1)(R131A), or of the aromatic residue phenylalanine 207 by histidine (alpha(1)(F207H)), converted the alpha(1) GlyR into a chloride channel that was activated by Zn2+ alone. Dose-response analysis of the alpha(1)(F207H) GlyR disclosed an EC(50) value of 1.2 microM for Zn2+ activation; concomitantly the apparent glycine affinity was 1000-fold reduced. Thus, single point mutations within the agonist-binding site of the alpha(1) subunit convert the inhibitory GlyR from a glycine-gated into a selectively Zn2+-activated chloride channel. This might be exploited for the design of metal-specific biosensors by modeling-assisted mutagenesis.  相似文献   

5.
The substituted cysteine accessibility method was used to probe the surface exposure of a pore-lining threonine residue (T6') common to both the glycine receptor (GlyR) and gamma-aminobutyric acid, type A receptor (GABA(A)R) chloride channels. This residue lies close to the channel activation gate, the ionic selectivity filter, and the main pore blocker binding site. Despite their high amino acid sequence homologies and common role in conducting chloride ions, recent studies have suggested that the GlyRs and GABA(A)Rs have divergent open state pore structures at the 6' position. When both the human alpha1(T6'C) homomeric GlyR and the rat alpha1(T6'C)beta1(T6'C) heteromeric GABA(A)R were expressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, their 6' residue surface accessibilities differed significantly in the closed state. However, when a soluble cysteine-modifying compound was applied in the presence of saturating agonist concentrations, both receptors were locked into the open state. This action was not induced by oxidizing agents in either receptor. These results provide evidence for a conserved pore opening mechanism in anion-selective members of the ligand-gated ion channel family. The results also indicate that the GABA(A)R pore structure at the 6' level may vary between different expression systems.  相似文献   

6.
In the ionotropic glutamate receptor, the global conformational changes induced by partial agonists are smaller than those induced by full agonists. However, in the pentameric ligand-gated ion channel receptor family, the structural basis of partial agonism is not understood. This study investigated whether full and partial agonists induce different conformation changes in the glycine receptor chloride channel (GlyR). A substituted cysteine accessibility analysis demonstrated previously that glycine binding induced an increase in surface accessibility of all residues from Arg(271) to Lys(276) in the M2-M3 domain of the homomeric alpha1 GlyR. Here we compare the surface accessibility changes induced by the full agonist, glycine, and the partial agonist, taurine. In GlyRs incorporating the A272C, S273C, L274C, or P275C mutation, the reaction rate of the cysteine-specific compound, methanethiosulfonate ethyltrimethylammonium, depended on how strongly the receptors were activated but was agonist-independent. Reaction rates could not be compared in the R271C and K276C mutant GlyRs because methanethiosulfonate ethyltrimethylammonium did not modify the extremely small currents induced by saturating taurine or equivalent low glycine concentrations. The results indicate that bound taurine and glycine molecules impose identical conformational changes to the M2-M3 domain. We therefore conclude that the higher efficacy of glycine is due to an increased ability to stabilize a common activated configuration.  相似文献   

7.
The inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR) is a ligand-gated chloride channel protein which displays developmental heterogeneity in the mammalian central nervous system. Here we describe 2 novel cDNA variants of the rat GlyR alpha 2 subunit and demonstrate that alternative splicing generates these 2 isoforms. The deduced protein sequences (alpha 2A and alpha 2B) exhibit 99% identity with the previously characterized human alpha 2 subunit. In situ hybridization revealed expression of both alpha 2A and alpha 2B mRNAs in the prenatal rat brain, suggesting that these variant proteins may have a role in synaptogenesis. Heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes showed that the more abundantly expressed alpha 2A subunit forms strychnine-sensitive ion channels which resemble human alpha 2 subunit GlyRs in their electrophysiological properties.  相似文献   

8.
J Kuhse  V Schmieden  H Betz 《Neuron》1990,5(6):867-873
Agonist activation of the inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR) in the adult vertebrate CNS is efficiently antagonized by the alkaloid strychnine. Here, we describe a novel rat GlyR alpha subunit cDNA (alpha 2*) that generates chloride channels of low strychnine sensitivity upon expression in Xenopus oocytes. Comparison with the highly homologous human alpha 2 polypeptide and site-directed mutagenesis identified a single amino acid exchange at position 167 that causes the altered pharmacology of alpha 2* receptors. Amplification by the polymerase chain reaction revealed a strong decrease in alpha 2* mRNA abundancy during postnatal spinal cord development. These data indicate that alpha 2* represents a ligand binding subunit of the previously identified neonatal GlyR isoform of low strychnine affinity.  相似文献   

9.
Ivermectin is an anthelmintic drug that works by activating glutamate-gated chloride channel receptors (GluClRs) in nematode parasites. GluClRs belong to the Cys-loop receptor family that also includes glycine receptor (GlyR) chloride channels. GluClRs and A288G mutant GlyRs are both activated by low nanomolar ivermectin concentrations. The crystal structure of the Caenorhabditis elegans α GluClR complexed with ivermectin has recently been published. Here, we probed ivermectin sensitivity determinants on the α1 GlyR using site-directed mutagenesis and electrophysiology. Based on a mutagenesis screen of transmembrane residues, we identified Ala288 and Pro230 as crucial sensitivity determinants. A comparison of the actions of selamectin and ivermectin suggested the benzofuran C05-OH was required for high efficacy. When taken together with docking simulations, these results supported a GlyR ivermectin binding orientation similar to that seen in the GluClR crystal structure. However, whereas the crystal structure shows that ivermectin interacts with the α GluClR via H-bonds with Leu218, Ser260, and Thr285 (α GluClR numbering), our data indicate that H-bonds with residues homologous to Ser260 and Thr285 are not important for high ivermectin sensitivity or direct agonist efficacy in A288G α1 GlyRs or three other GluClRs. Our data also suggest that van der Waals interactions between the ivermectin disaccharide and GlyR M2-M3 loop residues are unimportant for high ivermectin sensitivity. Thus, although our results corroborate the ivermectin binding orientation as revealed by the crystal structure, they demonstrate that some of the binding interactions revealed by this structure do not pertain to other highly ivermectin-sensitive Cys-loop receptors.  相似文献   

10.
T Takagi  I Pribilla  J Kirsch  H Betz 《FEBS letters》1992,303(2-3):178-180
The inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR) is a ligand-gated chloride channel protein, whose ligand binding alpha subunit occurs in several isoforms in the mammalian central nervous system. Here we show that coexpression of the GlyR-associated protein gephyrin changes the agonist and antagonist binding affinities of GlyRs generated by alpha 2 subunit expression in 293 kidney cells. Thus, a receptor-associated protein modifies the functional properties of a neurotransmitter receptor. This may contribute to an optimization of the postsynaptic neurotransmitter response.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, we have compared the functional consequences of three mutations (R218Q, V260M, and Q266H) in the alpha(1) subunit of the glycine receptor (GlyRA1) causing hyperekplexia, an inherited neurological channelopathy. In HEK-293 cells, the agonist EC(50s) for glycine-activated Cl(-) currents were increased from 26 microm in wtGlyRA1, to 5747, 135, and 129 microm in R218Q, V260M, and Q266H GlyRA1 channels, respectively. Cl(-) currents elicited by beta-alanine and taurine, which behave as agonists at wtGlyRA1, were decreased in V260M and Q266H mutant receptors and virtually abolished in GlyRA1 R218Q receptors. Gly-gated Cl(-) currents were similarly antagonized by low concentrations of strychnine in both wild-type (wt) and R218Q GlyRA1 channels, suggesting that the Arg-218 residue plays a crucial role in GlyRA1 channel gating, with only minor effects on the agonist/antagonist binding site, a hypothesis supported by our molecular model of the GlyRA1 subunit. The R218Q mutation, but not the V260M or the Q266H mutation, caused a marked decrease of receptor subunit expression both in total cell lysates and in isolated plasma membrane proteins. This decreased expression does not seem to explain the reduced agonist sensitivity of GlyRA1 R218Q channels since no difference in the apparent sensitivity to glycine or taurine was observed when wtGlyRA1 receptors were expressed at levels comparable with those of R218Q mutant receptors. In conclusion, multiple mechanisms may explain the dramatic decrease in GlyR function caused by the R218Q mutation, possibly providing the molecular basis for its association with a more severe clinical phenotype.  相似文献   

12.
Cultured human cells were transfected with cloned rat glycine receptor (GlyR) 48 kd subunit cDNA. In these cells glycine elicited large chloride currents (up to 1.5 nA), which were blocked by nanomolar concentrations of strychnine. However, no corresponding high-affinity binding of [3H]strychnine was detected in membrane preparations of the transfected cells. Analysis by monoclonal antibodies specific for the 48 kd subunit revealed high expression levels of this membrane protein. After solubilization, the 48 kd subunit behaved as a macromolecular complex when analyzed by sucrose density centrifugation. Approximately 50% of the solubilized complex bound specifically to a 2-aminostrychnine affinity column, indicating the existence of low-affinity antagonist binding sites on most of the expressed GlyR protein. Thus, the 48 kd strychnine binding subunit efficiently assembles into high molecular weight complexes, resembling the native spinal cord GlyR. However, formation of functional receptor channels of high affinity for strychnine occurs with low efficiency.  相似文献   

13.
The inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR) is a ligand-gated chloride channel protein that occurs in developmentally regulated isoforms in the vertebrate central nervous system. Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against the GlyR distinguish neonatal and adult GlyR proteins by identifying distinct alpha subunit variants within these receptor isoforms. Here, bacterially expressed fusion proteins of the rat GlyR alpha 1 subunit were used to localize the major antigenic epitopes of this protein within its N-terminal 105 amino acids. Synthetic peptides allowed further fine mapping of two mAb binding domains. MAb 2b, specific for the adult alpha 1 subunit, bound to a peptide corresponding to amino acids 1-10, whereas mAb 4a, which recognizes both neonatal and adult GlyR isoforms, reacted with a peptide representing residues 96-105 of the alpha 1 polypeptide. These data define unique and common antigenic epitopes on GlyR alpha subunit variants.  相似文献   

14.
Ligand-gated ion channel receptors mediate neuronal inhibition or excitation depending on their ion charge selectivity. An investigation into the determinants of ion charge selectivity of the anion-selective alpha1 homomeric glycine receptor (alpha1 glycine receptor [GlyR]) was undertaken using point mutations to residues lining the extra- and intracellular ends of the ion channel. Five mutant GlyRs were studied. A single substitution at the intracellular mouth of the channel (A-1'E GlyR) was sufficient to convert the channels to select cations over anions with P(Cl)/P(Na) = 0.34. This result delimits the selectivity filter and provides evidence that electrostatic interactions between permeating ions and pore residues are a critical factor in ion charge selectivity. The P-2'Delta mutant GlyR retained its anion selectivity (P(Cl)/P(Na) = 3.81), but it was much reduced compared with the wild-type (WT) GlyR (P(Cl)/P(Na) = 27.9). When the A-1'E and the P-2'Delta mutations were combined (selectivity double mutant [SDM] GlyR), the relative cation permeability was enhanced (P(Cl)/P(Na) = 0.13). The SDM GlyR was also Ca(2+) permeable (P(Ca)/P(Na) = 0.29). Neutralizing the extracellular mouth of the SDM GlyR ion channel (SDM+R19'A GlyR) produced a more Ca(2+)-permeable channel (P(Ca)/P(Na) = 0.73), without drastically altering monovalent charge selectivity (P(Cl)/P(Na) = 0.23). The SDM+R19'E GlyR, which introduces a negatively charged ring at the extracellular mouth of the channel, further enhanced Ca(2+) permeability (P(Ca)/P(Na) = 0.92), with little effect on monovalent selectivity (P(Cl)/P(Na) = 0.19). Estimates of the minimum pore diameter of the A-1'E, SDM, SDM+R19'A, and SDM+R19'E GlyRs revealed that these pores are larger than the alpha1 GlyR, with the SDM-based GlyRs being comparable in diameter to the cation-selective nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. This result provides evidence that the diameter of the ion channel is also an important factor in ion charge selectivity.  相似文献   

15.
The pentameric glycine receptor (GlyR), a member of the nicotinicoid superfamily of ligand-gated ion channels, is an inhibitory Cl(-) channel that is gated by glycine. Using recently published NMR data of the second transmembrane segment (M2) of the human alpha1 GlyR, structural models of pentameric assemblies embedded in a lipid bilayer were constructed using a combination of experimentally determined constraints coupled with all-atom energy minimization. Based on this structure of the pentameric M2 "pore", Brownian dynamics simulations of ion permeation through this putative conducting open state of the channel were carried out. Simulated I-V curves were in good agreement with published experimental current-voltage curves and the anion/cation permeability ratio, suggesting that our open-state model may be representative of the conducting channel of the full-length receptor. These studies also predicted regions of chloride occupancy and suggested residues critical to anion permeation. Calculations of the conductance of the cation-selective mutant A251E channel are also consistent with experimental data. In addition, both rotation and untilting of the pore helices of our model were found to be broadly consistent with closing of the channel, albeit at distinct regions that may reflect alternate gates of the receptor.  相似文献   

16.
The strychnine-sensitive glycine receptor (GlyR) is a ligand-gated chloride channel composed of ligand binding alpha- and gephyrin anchoring beta-subunits. To identify the secondary and quaternary structures of extramembraneous receptor domains, the N-terminal extracellular domain (alpha1-(1-219)) and the large intracellular TM3-4 loop (alpha1-(309-392)) of the human GlyR alpha1-subunit were individually expressed in HEK293 cells and in Escherichia coli. The extracellular domain obtained from E. coli expression was purified in its denatured form and refolding conditions were established. Circular dichroism and Fourier-transform-infrared spectroscopy suggested approximately 25% alpha-helix and approximately 48% beta-sheet for the extracellular domain, while no alpha-helices were detectable for the TM3-4 loop. Size exclusion chromatography and sucrose density centrifugation indicated that isolated glycine receptor domains assembled into multimers of distinct molecular weight. For the extracellular domain from E. coli, we found an apparent molecular weight compatible with a 15mer by gel filtration. The N-terminal domain from HEK293 cells, analyzed by sucrose gradient centrifugation, showed a bimodal distribution, suggesting oligomerization of approximately 5 and 15 subunits. Likewise, for the intracellular domain from E. coli, a single molecular mass peak of approximately 49 kDa indicated oligomerization in a defined native structure. As shown by [(3)H]strychnine binding, expression in HEK293 cells and refolding of the isolated extracellular domain reconstituted high affinity antagonist binding. Cell fractionation, alkaline extraction experiments, and immunocytochemistry showed a tight plasma membrane association of the isolated GlyR N-terminal protein. These findings indicate that distinct functional characteristics of the full-length GlyR are retained in the isolated N-terminal domain.  相似文献   

17.
It is well known that the convulsant alkaloid picrotoxin (PTX) can inhibit neuronal gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and homomeric glycine receptors (GlyR). However, the mechanism for PTX block of alpha(2) homomeric GlyR is still unclear compared with that of alpha(1) homomeric GlyR, GABA(A), and GABA(C) receptors. Furthermore, PTX effects on GlyR kinetics have been poorly explored at the single-channel level. Hence, we used the patch-clamp technique in the outside-out configuration to investigate the mechanism of PTX suppression of currents carried by alpha(2) homomeric GlyRs stably transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells. PTX inhibited the alpha(2) homomeric GlyR current elicited by glycine in a concentration-dependent and voltage-independent manner. Both competitive and noncompetitive mechanisms were observed. PTX decreased the mean open time of the GlyR channel in a concentration-dependent manner, suggesting that PTX can block channel openings and bind to the receptor in the open channel conformation. When PTX and glycine were co-applied, a small rebound current was observed during drug washout. Application of PTX during the deactivation phase of glycine-induced currents eliminated the rebound current and accelerated the deactivation time course in a concentration-dependent manner. PTX could not bind to the unbound conformation of GlyR, but could be trapped at its binding site when the channel closed during glycine dissociation. Based on these observations, we propose a kinetic Markov model in which PTX binds to the alpha(2) homomeric GlyR in both the open channel state and the fully liganded closed state. Our data suggest a new allosteric mechanism for PTX inhibition of wild-type homomeric alpha(2) GlyR.  相似文献   

18.
To analyze the influence of the beta-subunit on the kinetic properties of GlyR channel currents, alpha(1)-subunits and alpha(1)beta-subunits were transiently expressed in HEK 293 cells. A piezo dimorph was used for fast application of glycine to outside-out patches. The rise time of activation was dose dependent for both receptors and decreased with increasing glycine concentrations. Subunit composition had no effect on the time course of activation. Coexpression of alpha(1)- and beta-subunits resulted in a significantly lower EC(50) and a reduced slope of the dose-response curve of glycine compared with expression of alpha(1)-subunits alone. For both receptor subtypes, the time course of desensitization was concentration dependent. Desensitization was best fitted with a single time constant at 10-30 micro M, with two at 0.1 mM, and at saturating concentrations (0.3-3 mM) with three time constants. Desensitization of homomeric alpha(1)-receptor channels was significantly slower than that of alpha(1)beta-receptor channels. The time course of current decay after the end of glycine pulses was tested at different pulse durations of 1 mM glycine. It was best fitted with two time constants for both alpha(1) and alpha(1)beta GlyR channels, and increased significantly with increasing pulse duration.  相似文献   

19.
Recent reports have provided evidence for the presence of amino acid neurotransmitter receptor/chloride channels in human and porcine spermatozoa and their involvement in the acrosome reaction (AR). In this work we investigated whether a glycine receptor (GlyR) was present in golden hamster sperm, and whether it had a role in the hamster AR. The neuronal GlyR agonist glycine, stimulated in a dose-dependent manner, the AR of hamster spermatozoa previously capacitated for at least 3 hr. This stimulation was completely inhibited by 50 microM (+)-bicuculline and by concentrations of strychnine as low as 10-50 nM; both agents are antagonists of neuronal GlyR when used at the concentrations reported in this study. beta-Alanine, another agonist of the neuronal GlyR, also stimulated the AR. The AR-stimulatory effect of this compound was completely abolished by 50 nM strychnine. The inhibitory effect of strychnine on the glycine-induced hamster sperm AR was completely overcome by subsequent treatment with the calcium ionophore ionomycin, demonstrating that the strychnine effect was specific for GlyR. Additional binding studies with (3)[H]-strychnine, the typical radioligand used to detect GlyR in several cells, demonstrated for the first time the presence of specific binding sites for strychnine in the hamster spermatozoa. Interestingly, binding increased during in vitro capacitation, particularly in those sperm suspensions showing high percentages of AR. Taken together these results strongly suggest the presence of a GlyR in the hamster spermatozoa, with a role in the AR when activated.  相似文献   

20.
I Pribilla  T Takagi  D Langosch  J Bormann    H Betz 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(12):4305-4311
Purified preparations of the inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR) contain alpha and beta subunits, which share homologous primary structures and a common transmembrane topology with other members of the ligand-gated ion channel superfamily. Here, a beta subunit-specific antiserum was shown to precipitate the [3H]strychnine binding sites localized on alpha subunits from membrane extracts of both rat spinal cord and mammalian cells co-transfected with alpha and beta cDNAs. Further, inhibition of alpha homo-oligomeric GlyRs by picrotoxinin, a non-competitive blocker of ion flow, was reduced 50- to 200-fold for alpha/beta hetero-oligomeric receptors generated by cotransfection. Site-directed mutagenesis identified residues within the second predicted transmembrane segment (M2) of the beta subunit as major determinants of picrotoxinin resistance. These data implicate the M2 segment in blocker binding to and lining of the GlyR chloride channel.  相似文献   

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