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1.
Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) immunoaffinity-purified from brains are composed of only two kinds of subunits rather than the four kinds present in muscle-type AChRs. Here we report the N-terminal protein sequences of the structural subunits of AChRs from rat and chicken brains and the cloning of full-length cDNAs for the chicken brain AChR structural subunit. Previously, the N-terminal amino acid sequence of the ACh-binding subunit of AChR immunoaffinity-purified from rat brain was shown to correspond to the cDNA alpha 4. Thus, cDNA sequences are now known for both of the subunits that form one AChR subtype in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
The acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha 5 gene has been classified as a member of the AChR gene family based on sequence homology. Expression studies, however, have yet to identify a function for the alpha 5 gene product or even to demonstrate an interaction with known AChR subunits. We report here that the alpha 5 gene product is identical to the 49 kd protein previously found on immunoblots of AChRs purified from brain and ciliary ganglia. In brain the alpha 5 gene product is present both in alpha 3- and in alpha 4-based receptor subtypes, while in the ganglion it is found in an alpha 3-based receptor subtype concentrated in postsynaptic membrane. Immunoprecipitation experiments with subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies indicate that some native AChRs are likely to have at least three kinds of subunits, with two being of the alpha type. These findings support new views about the construction of AChRs in neurons.  相似文献   

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

4.
To study the functional and structural roles of the epsilon subunit in adult muscle acetylcholine receptor (AChR), we have co-expressed the alpha and epsilon subunits of the mouse receptor in transfected fibroblasts. Ligand binding studies suggest that association of epsilon with alpha subunit results in a lower association rate constant for 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin binding than that of the unassembled alpha subunit, approaching that for toxin binding to the AChR. Furthermore, alpha epsilon complexes contain high affinity binding sites for competitive antagonists and agonists not present in the unassembled alpha subunit, but similar to one of the two nonequivalent binding sites in the adult AChR. Structural analysis of alpha epsilon complexes by sucrose gradient velocity centrifugation suggests that some of the complexes formed are trimers or tetramers of alpha and epsilon subunits. Comparison of these data with those previously obtained for alpha gamma complexes suggests that gamma and epsilon have homologous functional roles and identical structural positions in the fetal and adult AChRs, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
The acetylcholine receptor (AChR) synthesis, insertion and degradation rates are regulated by numerous intracellular and extracellular agents. Recent studies have shown that Ca2+ and Ca2+ ionophores have a profound regulatory effect on the appearance of AChR clusters and AChR synthesis. These regulatory effects may be mediated through the activation of calcium and phospholipid-dependent protein kinases by agents such as phorbol esters. In this study, we have utilized 4-beta-phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) in order to determine whether the activation of protein kinase C exerts a regulatory effect on the expression of AChRs in cultured chick myotubes. Our results show that 4-beta-phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate decreased intracellular AChRs and suppressed AChR synthesis without affecting the turnover rate. Control and PMA treated cells labeled with [35S] methionine and immunoprecipitated with a monoclonal antibody to the alpha subunit of AChRs (mAb35) revealed a significant decrease in radioactivity precipitated after exposure to PMA. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed no major changes in protein patterns, or in newly synthesized proteins as determined by [35S] methionine incorporation and autoradiography. Other enzymes important in muscle metabolism were not affected by PMA treatment. Our results indicate that activation of protein kinase C results in the suppression of AChRs synthesis and dispersal of AChR clusters.  相似文献   

6.
Escobar syndrome is a form of arthrogryposis multiplex congenita and features joint contractures, pterygia, and respiratory distress. Similar findings occur in newborns exposed to nicotinergic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibodies from myasthenic mothers. We performed linkage studies in families with Escobar syndrome and identified eight mutations within the gamma -subunit gene (CHRNG) of the AChR. Our functional studies show that gamma -subunit mutations prevent the correct localization of the fetal AChR in human embryonic kidney-cell membranes and that the expression pattern in prenatal mice corresponds to the human clinical phenotype. AChRs have five subunits. Two alpha, one beta, and one delta subunit are always present. By switching gamma to epsilon subunits in late fetal development, fetal AChRs are gradually replaced by adult AChRs. Fetal and adult AChRs are essential for neuromuscular signal transduction. In addition, the fetal AChRs seem to be the guide for the primary encounter of axon and muscle. Because of this important function in organogenesis, human mutations in the gamma subunit were thought to be lethal, as they are in gamma -knockout mice. In contrast, many mutations in other subunits have been found to be viable but cause postnatally persisting or beginning myasthenic syndromes. We conclude that Escobar syndrome is an inherited fetal myasthenic disease that also affects neuromuscular organogenesis. Because gamma expression is restricted to early development, patients have no myasthenic symptoms later in life. This is the major difference from mutations in the other AChR subunits and the striking parallel to the symptoms found in neonates with arthrogryposis when maternal AChR auto-antibodies crossed the placenta and caused the transient inactivation of the AChR pathway.  相似文献   

7.
Each subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) contains two conserved cysteine residues, which are known to form a disulfide bond, in the N-terminal extracellular domain. The role of this retained structural feature in the biogenesis of the AChR was studied by expressing site-directed mutant alpha and beta subunits together with other normal subunits from Torpedo californica AChR in Xenopus oocytes. Mutation of the cysteines at position 128 or 142 in the alpha subunit, or in the beta subunit, did not prevent subunit assembly. All Cys128 and Cys142 mutants of the alpha and beta subunits were able to associate with coexpressed other normal subunits, although associational efficiency of the mutant alpha subunits with the delta subunit was reduced. Functional studies of the mutant AChR complexes showed that the mutations in the alpha subunit abolished detectable 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BuTX) binding in whole oocytes, whereas the mutations in the beta subunit resulted in decreased total binding of 125I-alpha-BuTX and no detectable surface 125I-alpha-BuTX binding. Additionally, all mutant subunits, when co-expressed with the other normal subunits in oocytes, produced small acetylcholine-activated membrane currents, suggesting incorporation of only small numbers of functional mutant AChRs into the plasma membrane. The functional acetylcholine-gated ion channel formed with mutant alpha subunits, but not mutant beta subunits, could not be blocked by alpha-BuTX. Thus, a disulfide bond between Cys128 and Cys142 of the AChR alpha or beta subunits is not needed for acetylcholine-binding. However, this disulfide bond on the alpha subunit is necessary for formation of the alpha-BuTX-binding site. These results also suggest that the most significant effect caused by disrupting the conserved disulfide loop structure is intracellular retention of most of the assembled AChR complexes.  相似文献   

8.
Assembly of Torpedo acetylcholine receptors in Xenopus oocytes   总被引:3,自引:2,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
To study pathways by which acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits might assemble, Torpedo alpha subunits were expressed in Xenopus oocytes alone or in combination with beta, gamma, or delta subunits. The maturation of the conformation of the main immunogenic region (MIR) on alpha subunits was measured by binding of mAbs and the maturation of the conformation of the AChR binding site on alpha subunits was measured by binding of alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha Bgt) and cholinergic ligands. The size of subunits and subunit complexes was assayed by sedimentation on sucrose gradients. It is generally accepted that native AChRs have the subunit composition alpha 2 beta gamma delta. Torpedo alpha subunits expressed alone resulted in an amorphous range of complexes with little affinity for alpha Bgt or mAbs to the MIR, rather than in a unique 5S monomeric assembly intermediate species. A previously recognized temperature-dependent failure in alpha subunit maturation may cause instability of the monomeric assembly intermediate and accumulation of aggregated denatured alpha subunits. Coexpression of alpha with beta subunits also resulted in an amorphous range of complexes. However, coexpression of alpha subunits with gamma or delta subunits resulted in the efficient formation of 6.5S alpha gamma or alpha delta complexes with high affinity for mAbs to the MIR, alpha Bgt, and small cholinergic ligands. These alpha gamma and alpha delta subunit pairs may represent normal assembly intermediates in which Torpedo alpha is stabilized and matured in conformation. Coexpression of alpha, gamma, and delta efficiently formed 8.8S complexes, whereas complexes containing alpha beta and gamma or alpha beta and delta subunits are formed less efficiently. Assembly of beta subunits with complexes containing alpha gamma and delta subunits may normally be a rate-limiting step in assembly of AChRs.  相似文献   

9.
Assembly of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits was investigated using mouse fibroblast cell lines stably expressing either Torpedo (All-11) or mouse (AM-4) alpha, beta, gamma, and delta AChR subunits. Both cell lines produce fully functional cell surface AChRs. We find that two independent treatments, lower temperature and increased intracellular cAMP can increase AChR expression by increasing the efficiency of subunit assembly. Previously, we showed that the rate of degradation of individual subunits was decreased as the temperature was lowered and that Torpedo AChR expression was acutely temperature sensitive, requiring temperatures lower than 37 degrees C. We find that Torpedo AChR assembly efficiency increases 56-fold as the temperature is decreased from 37 to 20 degrees C. To determine how much of this is a temperature effect on degradation, mouse AChR assembly efficiencies were determined and found to be only approximately fourfold more efficient at 20 than at 37 degrees C. With reduced temperatures, we can achieve assembly efficiencies of Torpedo AChR in fibroblasts of 20-35%. Mouse AChR in muscle cells is also approximately 30% and we obtain approximately 30% assembly efficiency of mouse AChR in fibroblasts (with reduced temperatures, this value approaches 100%). Forskolin, an agent which increases intracellular cAMP levels, increased subunit assembly efficiencies twofold with a corresponding increase in cell surface AChR. Pulse-chase experiments and immunofluorescence microscopy indicate that oligomer assembly occurs in the ER and that AChR oligomers remain in the ER until released to the cell surface. Once released, AChRs move rapidly through the Golgi membrane to the plasma membrane. Forskolin does not alter the intracellular distribution of AChR. Our results indicate that cell surface expression of AChR can be regulated at the level of subunit assembly and suggest a mechanism for the cAMP-induced increase in AChR expression.  相似文献   

10.
By using the large cytoplasmic domain of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha4 subunit as a bait in the yeast two-hybrid system, we isolated the first cytosolic protein, 14-3-3eta, known to interact directly with neuronal AChRs. 14-3-3eta is a member of a family of proteins that function as regulatory or chaperone/ scaffolding/adaptor proteins. 14-3-3eta interacted with the recombinant alpha4 subunit alone in tsA 201 cells following activation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase by forskolin. The interaction of 14-3-3eta with recombinant alpha4 subunits was abolished when serine 441 of the alpha4 subunit was mutated to alanine (alpha4(S441A)). The surface levels of recombinant wild-type alpha4beta2 AChRs were approximately 2-fold higher than those of mutant alpha4(S441A)beta2 AChRs. The interaction significantly increased the steady state levels of the alpha4 subunit and alpha4beta2 AChRs but not that of the mutant alpha4(S441A) subunit or mutant alpha4(S441A)beta2 AChRs. The EC50 values for activation by acetylcholine were not significantly different for alpha4beta2 AChRs and alpha4(S441A)beta2 AChRs coexpressed with 14-3-3eta in oocytes following treatment with forskolin. 14-3-3 coimmunopurified with native alpha4 AChRs from brain. These results support a role for 14-3-3 in dynamically regulating the expression levels of alpha4beta2 AChRs through its interaction with the alpha4 subunit.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Y Gu  P Camacho  P Gardner  Z W Hall 《Neuron》1991,6(6):879-887
We have used a species difference in epsilon subunits of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) to investigate regions of the subunit protein that are important in receptor assembly. Upon transient transfection of COS cells, mouse epsilon subunit cDNA is approximately 10 times more effective than that of the rat in supporting expression of surface AChRs when the other subunits are from either mouse or rat. In cells transfected with only alpha and epsilon subunit cDNAs, the formation of an alpha epsilon heterodimer, a presumed assembly intermediate, is also less efficient with rat than with mouse epsilon subunit. By site-directed mutagenesis, we have found that these differences can be accounted for by 2 amino acid differences in the N-terminal domain at positions 106 and 115 of the rat and mouse epsilon subunits, suggesting that the region near these 2 amino acid residues is important for AChR assembly.  相似文献   

13.
Intact nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) tightly binds alpha-bungarotoxin. The two toxin-binding sites are presumed to be on the two alpha-subunits, either on or near the ACh-binding sites. Isolated alpha-subunits have been found to maintain weak binding to alpha-bungarotoxin (KD approximately 0.2 microM). We describe here conditions under which the alpha-subunit and a 27,000-dalton proteolytic peptide bound alpha-bungarotoxin with high affinity. The four subunits of Torpedo marmorata AChR, as well as several proteolytic peptides of the alpha-subunit, were first purified by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. We found that the purified alpha-subunit (but not the beta-, gamma- or delta-subunits) and its 27,000-dalton peptide specifically bound 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin with KD approximately 3 and 6 nM, i.e., about two orders of magnitude lower than the intact AChR. Nearly 100% of the sites were recovered. The recovery of this high affinity binding required the presence of SDS (approximately 0.02%) but non-denaturing detergents had a strongly inhibitory effect. Unlabeled alpha-toxins competed with labeled alpha-bungarotoxin, alpha-bungarotoxin being more effective than all the other toxins tested. Decamethonium and hexamethonium competed efficiently with alpha-bungarotoxin binding but carbamylcholine had only a weak effect. The main immunogenic region of the AChR was only partially preserved since conformation-dependent monoclonal antibodies to this region bound the alpha subunit-toxin complexes, but much less efficiently than the intact AChR. We conclude that SDS can be advantageous to the recovery of high toxin binding to the alpha subunit which still has not completely recovered its native conformation.  相似文献   

14.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) can be either hetero-pentameric, composed of alpha and non-alpha subunits, or homo-pentameric, composed of alpha7 subunits. To explore the subunit-selective contributions of transmembrane domains to channel gating we analyzed single-channel activity of chimeric muscle AChRs. We exchanged M3 between alpha1 and epsilon or alpha7 subunits. The replacement of M3 in alpha1 by epsilonM3 significantly alters activation properties. Channel activity appears as bursts of openings whose durations are 20-fold longer than those of wild-type AChRs. In contrast, 7-fold briefer openings are observed in AChRs containing the reverse epsilon chimeric subunit. The duration of the open state decreases with the increase in the number of alpha1M3 segments, indicating additive contributions of M3 of all subunits to channel closing. Each alpha1M3 segment decreases the energy barrier of the closing process by approximately 0.8 kcal/mol. Partial chimeric subunits show that small stretches of the M3 segment contribute additively to the open duration. The replacement of alpha1 sequence by alpha7 in M3 leads to 3-fold briefer openings whereas in M1 it leads to 10-fold prolonged openings, revealing that the subunit-selective role is unique to each transmembrane segment.  相似文献   

15.
Alpha-conotoxins   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
alpha-Conotoxins (alpha-CgTxs) are a family of Cys-enriched peptides found in several marine snails from the genus Conus. These small peptides behave pharmacologically as competitive antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The data indicate that (1) alpha-CgTxs are able to discriminate between muscle- and neuronal-type AChRs and even among distinct AChR subtypes; (2) the binding sites for alpha-CgTxs are located, like other cholinergic ligands, at the interface of alpha and non-alpha subunits (gamma, delta, and epsilon for the muscle-type AChR, and beta for several neuronal-type AChRs); (3) some alpha-CgTxs differentiate the high- from the low-affinity binding site found on either alpha/non-alpha subunit interface; and that (4) specific residues in the cholinergic binding site are energetically coupled with their corresponding pairs in the toxin stabilizing the alpha-CgTx-AChR complex. The alpha-CgTxs have proven to be excellent probes for studying the structure and function of the AChR family.  相似文献   

16.
M K Das  J Lindstrom 《Biochemistry》1991,30(9):2470-2477
Concurrent synthesis of overlapping octameric peptides corresponding to the sequence of the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha subunit has been carried out on polypropylene supports functionalized with primary amino groups according to a method developed by M. Geysen [(1987) J. Immunol. Methods 102, 259-274]. The peptides on the solid supports have been used in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Interactions of the synthetic peptides with antibodies are then detected without removing them from the solid support. By this procedure, epitopes of both antisera and monoclonal antibodies to the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor, its subunits, and synthetic peptide fragments have been mapped. Both rat and rabbit antisera to the alpha subunit show major epitopes spanning the residues 150-165, 338-345, and 355-366 on the Torpedo AChR alpha subunit. Epitopes of monoclonal antibodies to these major epitopes and to others have been rather precisely mapped by using this technique with peptides of varying lengths. The specificity of several of these mAbs are of interest because they have been used in mapping the transmembrane orientation of the AChR alpha-subunit polypeptide chain.  相似文献   

17.
We characterized the functional and molecular properties of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) expressed by IMR-32, a human neuroblastoma cell line, and compared them to human alpha3 AChRs expressed in stably transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells. IMR-32 cells, like neurons of autonomic ganglia, have been shown to express alpha3, alpha5, alpha7, beta2, and beta4 AChR subunits. From these subunits, several types of alpha3 AChRs as well as homomeric alpha7 AChRs could be formed. However, as we show, the properties of functional AChRs in these cells overwhelmingly reflect alpha3beta4 AChRs. alpha7 AChR function was not detected, yet we estimate that there are 70% as many surface alpha7 AChRs in IMR-32 when compared with alpha3 AChRs. Agonist potencies (EC(50) values) followed the rank order of 1,1-dimethyl-4-phenylpiperazinium (DMPP; 16+/-1 microM) > nicotine (Nic; 48 +/- 7 microM) > or = cytisine (Cyt; 57 +/- 3 microM) = acetylcholine (ACh; 59 +/- 6 microM). All agonists exhibited efficacies of at least 80% relative to ACh. The currents showed strong inward rectification and desensitized at a rate of 3 s(-1) (300 microM ACh; -60 mV). Assays that used mAbs confirmed the predominance of alpha3- and beta4-containing AChRs in IMR-32 cells. Although 18% of total alpha3 AChRs contained beta2 subunits, no beta2 subunit was detected on the cell surface. Chronic Nic incubation increased the amount of total, but not surface alpha3beta2 AChRs in IMR-32 cells. Nic incubation and reduced culture temperature increased total and surface AChRs in alpha3beta2 transfected HEK cells. Characterization of various alpha3 AChRs expressed in HEK cell lines revealed that the functional properties of the alpha3beta4 cell line best matched those found for IMR-32 cells. The rank order of agonist potencies (EC(50) values) for this line was DMPP (14 +/- 1 microM) = Cyt (18 +/- 1 microM) > Nic (56 +/- 15 microM > ACh (79 +/- 8 microM). The efficacies of both Cyt and DMPP were approximately 80% when compared with ACh and the desensitization rate was 2 s(-1). These data show that even with the potential to express several human nicotinic AChR subtypes, the functional properties of AChRs expressed by IMR-32 are completely attributable to alpha3beta4 AChRs.  相似文献   

18.
alpha-Bungarotoxin (alpha Bgt) is a potent, high-affinity antagonist for nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) from muscle, but not for AChRs from neurons. Both muscle and neuronal AChRs are thought to be formed from multiple homologous subunits aligned around a central cation channel whose opening is regulated by ACh binding. In contrast, the exact structure and function of high-affinity alpha Bgt binding proteins (alpha BgtBPs) found in avian and mammalian neurons remain unknown. Here we show that cDNA clones encoding alpha BgtBP alpha 1 and alpha 2 subunits define alpha BgtBPs as members of a gene family within the ligand-gated ion channel gene superfamily, but distinct from the gene families of AChRs from muscles and nerves. Subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies raised against bacterially expressed alpha BgtBP alpha 1 and alpha 2 subunit fragments reveal the existence of at least two different alpha BgtBP subtypes in embryonic day 18 chicken brains. More than 75% of all alpha BgtBPs have the alpha 1 subunit, but no alpha 2 subunit, and a minor alpha BgtBP subtype (approximately 15%) has both the alpha 1 and alpha 2 subunits.  相似文献   

19.
Identification of all residues involved in the recognition and binding of cholinergic ligands (e.g. agonists, competitive antagonists, and noncompetitive agonists) is a primary objective to understand which structural components are related to the physiological function of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The picture for the localization of the agonist/competitive antagonist binding sites is now clearer in the light of newer and better experimental evidence. These sites are located mainly on both alpha subunits in a pocket approximately 30-35 A above the surface membrane. Since both alpha subunits are identical, the observed high and low affinity for different ligands on the receptor is conditioned by the interaction of the alpha subunit with other non-alpha subunits. This molecular interaction takes place at the interface formed by the different subunits. For example, the high-affinity acetylcholine (ACh) binding site of the muscle-type AChR is located on the alphadelta subunit interface, whereas the low-affinity ACh binding site is located on the alphagamma subunit interface. Regarding homomeric AChRs (e.g. alpha7, alpha8, and alpha9), up to five binding sites may be located on the alphaalpha subunit interfaces. From the point of view of subunit arrangement, the gamma subunit is in between both alpha subunits and the delta subunit follows the alpha aligned in a clockwise manner from the gamma. Although some competitive antagonists such as lophotoxin and alpha-bungarotoxin bind to the same high- and low-affinity sites as ACh, other cholinergic drugs may bind with opposite specificity. For instance, the location of the high- and the low-affinity binding site for curare-related drugs as well as for agonists such as the alkaloid nicotine and the potent analgesic epibatidine (only when the AChR is in the desensitized state) is determined by the alphagamma and the alphadelta subunit interface, respectively. The case of alpha-conotoxins (alpha-CoTxs) is unique since each alpha-CoTx from different species is recognized by a specific AChR type. In addition, the specificity of alpha-CoTxs for each subunit interface is species-dependent.In general terms we may state that both alpha subunits carry the principal component for the agonist/competitive antagonist binding sites, whereas the non-alpha subunits bear the complementary component. Concerning homomeric AChRs, both the principal and the complementary component exist on the alpha subunit. The principal component on the muscle-type AChR involves three loops-forming binding domains (loops A-C). Loop A (from mouse sequence) is mainly formed by residue Y(93), loop B is molded by amino acids W(149), Y(152), and probably G(153), while loop C is shaped by residues Y(190), C(192), C(193), and Y(198). The complementary component corresponding to each non-alpha subunit probably contributes with at least four loops. More specifically, the loops at the gamma subunit are: loop D which is formed by residue K(34), loop E that is designed by W(55) and E(57), loop F which is built by a stretch of amino acids comprising L(109), S(111), C(115), I(116), and Y(117), and finally loop G that is shaped by F(172) and by the negatively-charged amino acids D(174) and E(183). The complementary component on the delta subunit, which corresponds to the high-affinity ACh binding site, is formed by homologous loops. Regarding alpha-neurotoxins, several snake and alpha-CoTxs bear specific residues that are energetically coupled with their corresponding pairs on the AChR binding site. The principal component for snake alpha-neurotoxins is located on the residue sequence alpha1W(184)-D(200), which includes loop C. In addition, amino acid sequence 55-74 from the alpha1 subunit (which includes loop E), and residues gammaL(119) (close to loop F) and gammaE(176) (close to loop G) at the low-affinity binding site, or deltaL(121) (close to the homologous region of loop G) at the high-affinity binding site, are i  相似文献   

20.
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