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1.
We have constructed a series of cysteine-substitution mutants in order to identify residues in the mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) that are involved in alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-Bgtx) binding. Following transient expression in HEK 293-derived TSA-201 cells, covalent modification of the introduced cysteines with thiol-specific reagents reveals that alpha subunit residues W187, V188, F189, Y190, and P194 are solvent accessible and are in a position to contribute to the alpha-Bgtx binding site in native receptors. These results with the intact receptor are consistent with NMR studies of an alpha-Bgtx/receptor-dodecapeptide complex [Basus, V., Song., G., and Hawrot, E. (1993) Biochemistry 32, 12290-12298]. We pursued a more detailed analysis of the F189C mutant as this site varies substantially between AChRs that bind Bgtx and certain neuronal AChRs that do not. Treatment of intact cells expressing F189C with either bromoacetylcholine (BrACh) or [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl] methane-thiosulfonate (MTSET), both methylammonium-containing thiol-modifying reagents with agonist properties, results in a marked decrease ( approximately 55-70%) in the number of alpha-Bgtx binding sites, as measured under saturating conditions. The decrease in sites appears to affect both alpha/gamma and alpha/delta sites to the same extent, as shown for alphaW187C and alphaF189C which were the two mutants examined on this issue. In contrast to the results obtained with MTSET and BrACh, modification with reagents that lack the alkylammonium entity, such as methylmethanethiosulfonate (MMTS), the negatively charged 2-sulfonatoethyl methane-thiosulfonate (MTSES), or the positively charged aminoethyl methylthiosulfonate (MTSEA), has little or no effect on the maximal binding of alpha-Bgtx to the alphaW187C, alphaV188C, or alphaF189C mutant receptors. The striking alkylammonium dependency suggests that an interaction of the tethered modifying group with the negative subsite within the agonist binding domain is primarily responsible for the observed blockade of toxin binding. 相似文献
2.
Formation of the alpha-bungarotoxin binding site and assembly of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunits occur in the endoplasmic reticulum 总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20
During the process by which newly synthesized subunits of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (stoichiometry = alpha 2 beta gamma delta) mature and acquire the properties of the fully functional cell surface receptor, they undergo numerous covalent and noncovalent modifications. Using ligand-mediated and subunit-specific immunoprecipitation, four forms in the maturation of the alpha subunit can be detected: the primary translation product; alpha subunit that can bind alpha-bungarotoxin; alpha subunit assembled with the other subunits; and surface receptor. The alpha subunit acquires the ability to bind alpha-bungarotoxin with a t1/2 of approximately 40 min after translation and becomes assembled with a t1/2 of 80 min after translation. Using metabolic labeling and sucrose gradient fractionation, we have determined the subcellular location of alpha subunit when it acquires the ability to bind alpha-bungarotoxin and when it is assembled. Golgi membranes were identified across the gradient by the enzymatic activities UDP-galactose:N-acetylglucosamine galactosyltransferase and alpha-mannosidase. Endoplasmic reticulum membranes were identified by the enzymatic activity glucose-6-phosphatase and by the presence of newly synthesized alpha and beta subunits. Pulse-labeled alpha subunit that bound alpha-bungarotoxin was first detected co-migrating in the gradient with the glucose-6-phosphatase activity. Therefore, the capacity to bind alpha-bungarotoxin was acquired while the alpha subunit was in the endoplasmic reticulum. Assembled alpha subunit was detected by immunoprecipitating with an anti-beta subunit-specific monoclonal antibody. By this method, assembled receptor was first detected 15 min after translation in both the endoplasmic and Golgi portions of the gradient. To validate this method of detecting assembled receptor, we determined the sedimentation coefficient of the receptor subunits in the endoplasmic reticulum. Both unassembled subunits with sedimentation coefficients of 5 S and assembled receptor with a sedimentation coefficient of 9 S were recovered from the endoplasmic reticulum portion of the gradient. Thus, our data concerning the subcellular site of assembly are consistent with assembly occurring in the endoplasmic reticulum followed by rapid transport to the Golgi. 相似文献
3.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to sequence segments of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) alpha subunits have been used to identify regions that contribute to formation of the binding sites for cholinergic ligands. We have previously defined alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) binding sequences between residues 180 and 199 of a putative rat neuronal nAChR alpha subunit, designated alpha 5 [McLane, K. E., Wu, X., & Conti-Tronconi, B. M. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 9816-9824], and between residues 181 and 200 of the chick neuronal alpha 7 and alpha 8 subunits [McLane, K. E., Wu, X., Schoepfer, R., Lindstrom, J., & Conti-Tronconi, B. M. (1991) J. Biol. Chem. (in press)]. These sequences are relatively divergent compared with the Torpedo and muscle nAChR alpha 1 alpha-BTX binding sites, which indicates a serious limitation of predicting functional domains of proteins based on homology in general. Given the highly divergent nature of the alpha 5 sequence, we were interested in determining the critical amino acid residues for alpha-BTX binding. In the present study, the effects of single amino acid substitutions of Gly or Ala for each residue of the rat alpha 5(180-199) sequence were tested, using a competition assay, in which peptides compete for 125I-alpha-BTX binding with native Torpedo nAChR.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献
4.
Synthetic peptides corresponding to 57% of the sequence of alpha subunits of acetylcholine receptors from Torpedo californica electric organ and extending from the NH2 to the COOCH terminus have been synthesized. The alpha-bungarotoxin binding site on denatured alpha subunits was mapped within the sequence alpha 185-199 by assaying binding of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin to slot blots of synthetic peptides. Further studies showed that residues in the sequence alpha 190-194, especially cysteines-alpha 192, 193, were critical for binding alpha-bungarotoxin. Reduction and alkylation studies suggested that these cysteines must be disulfide linked for alpha-bungarotoxin to bind. Binding sites for serum antibodies to native receptors or alpha subunits were mapped by indirect immunoprecipitation of 125I-peptides. Several antigenic sequences were identified, but a synthetic peptide corresponding to the main immunogenic region (which is highly conformation dependent) was not identified. 相似文献
5.
Intrinsic fluorescence of binding-site fragments of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor: perturbations produced upon binding alpha-bungarotoxin 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Synthetic peptides corresponding to sequences contained within residues 173-204 of the alpha-subunit in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) of Torpedo californica bind the competitive antagonist alpha-bungarotoxin (BGTX) with relative high affinity. Since the synthetic peptide fragments of the receptor and BGTX each contain a small number of aromatic residues, intrinsic fluorescence studies were used to investigate their interaction. We examined a number of receptor-derived peptide fragments of increasing length (4-32 amino acids). Changes in the lambda max and quantum yield with increasing polypeptide chain length suggest an increase in the hydrophobicity of the tryptophan environment. When selective excitation and subtraction were used to reveal the tyrosine fluorescence of the peptides, a significant red shift in emission was observed and was found to be due to an excited-state tyrosinate. The binding of BGTX to the receptor-derived peptide fragments resulted in a large increase in fluorescence. In addition, at equilibrium, the lambda max of tryptophan fluorescence was shifted to shorter wavelengths. The. fluorescence enhancement, which was saturable with either peptide or BGTX, was used to determine the dissociation constants for the complexes. At pH 7.4, the apparent Kd for a dodecameric peptide (alpha 185-196), consisting of residues 185-196 in the alpha-subunit of the nAChR from Torpedo californica, was 1.4 microM. The Kd for an 18-mer (alpha 181-198), consisting of residues 181-198 of the Torpedo alpha-subunit, was 0.3 microM. No binding or enhanced fluorescence was observed with an irrelevant synthetic peptide of comparable composition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献
6.
Summary Phencyclidine is a highly specific noncompetitive inhibitor of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. In a novel approach to study this site, a spin-labeled analogue of phencyclindine. 4-phenyl-4-(1-piperidinyl)-2.2.6.6.-tetramethylpiperidinoxyl (PPT) was synthesized. The binding of PPT inhibits86Rb flux (IC50=6.6m), and [3H] phencyclidine binding to both resting and desensitized acetylcholine receptor (IC50=17 m and 0.22 m, respectively). From an indirect Hill plot of the inhibition of [3H]phencyclidine binding by PPT. a Hill coefficient of approximately one was obtained in the presence of carbamylcholine and 0.8 in -bungarotoxin-treated preparations. Taken together, these results indicate that PPt mimics phencyclidine in its ability to bind to the noncompetitive inhibitor site and is functionally active in blocking ion flux across the acetylcholine receptor channel. Analysis of the electron spin resonance signal of the bound PPT suggests that the environment surrounding the probe within the ion channel is hydrophobic, with a hydrophobicity parameter of 1.09. A dielectric constant for the binding site was estimated to be in the range of 2–3 units. 相似文献
7.
In the native, membrane-bound form of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (M-AcChR) the two sites for the cholinergic antagonist alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BGT) have different binding properties. One site has high affinity, and the M-AcChR/alpha-BGT complexes thus formed dissociate very slowly, similar to the complexes formed with detergent-solubilized AcChR (S-AcChR). The second site has much lower affinity (KD approximately 59 +/- 35 nM) and forms quickly reversible complexes. The nondenaturing detergent Triton X-100 is known to solubilize the AcChR in a form unable, upon binding of cholinergic ligands, to open the ion channel and to become desensitized. Solubilization of the AcChR in Triton X-100 affects the binding properties of this second site and converts it to a high-affinity, slowly reversible site. Prolonged incubation of M-AcChR at 4 degrees C converts the low-affinity site to a high-affinity site similar to those observed in the presence of Triton X-100. Although the two sites have similar properties when the AcChR is solubilized in Triton X-100, their nonequivalence can be demonstrated by the effect on alpha-BGT binding of concanavalin A, which strongly reduces the association rate of one site only. The Bmax of alpha-BGT to either Triton-solubilized AcChR or M-AcChR is not affected by the presence of concanavalin A. Occupancy of the high-affinity, slowly reversible site in M-AcChR inhibits the Triton X-100 induced conversion to irreversibility of the second site. At difference with alpha-BGT, the long alpha-neurotoxin from Naja naja siamensis venom (alpha-NTX) binds with high affinity and in a very slowly reversible fashion to two sites in the M-AcChR (Conti-Tronconi & Raftery, 1986). We confirm here that Triton-solubilized AcChR or M-AcChR binds in a very slowly reversible fashion the same amount of alpha-NTX.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) 相似文献
8.
M G Bixel M Krauss Y Liu M L Bolognesi M Rosini I S Mellor P N Usherwood C Melchiorre K Nakanishi F Hucho 《European journal of biochemistry》2000,267(1):110-120
Several wasp venoms contain philanthotoxins (PhTXs), natural polyamine amides, which act as noncompetitive inhibitors (NCIs) on the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR). Effects of varying the structure of PhTXs and poly(methylene tetramine)s on the binding affinity have been investigated. Using the fluorescent NCI ethidium in a displacement assay Kapp values of these compounds have been determined. We found that an increase in size of the PhTX's hydrophobic head group significantly increased the binding affinity, while inserting positive charge almost completely destroyed it. Elongating the PhTX polyamine chain by introducing an additional aminomethylene group decreased the binding affinity, whereas a terminal lysine improved it. In general, poly(methylene tetramine)s showed higher binding affinities than PhTX analogues. The stoichiometry of PhTX binding was determined to be two PhTX molecules per receptor monomer. PhTXs appeared to bind to a single class of nonallosterically interacting binding sites and bound PhTX was found to be completely displaced by well-characterized luminal NCIs. To elucidate the site of PhTX binding, a photolabile, radioactive PhTX derivative was photocross-linked to the nAChR in its closed channel conformation resulting in labeling yields for the two alpha and the beta, gamma and delta subunits of 10.4, 11.1, 4.0 and 7.4%, respectively. Based on these findings we suggest that PhTXs and poly(methylene tetramine)s enter the receptor's ionic channel from the extracellular side. The hydrophobic head groups most likely bind to the high-affinity NCI site, while the positively charged polyamine chains presumably interact with the negatively charged selectivity filter located deep in the channel lumen. 相似文献
9.
Spura A Riel RU Freedman ND Agrawal S Seto C Hawrot E 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2000,275(29):22452-22460
Although previous results indicate that alpha-subunit residues Trp(187), Val(188), Phe(189), Tyr(190), and Pro(194) of the mouse nicotinic acetylcholine receptor are solvent-accessible and are in a position to contribute to the alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-Bgtx) binding site (Spura, A., Russin, T. S., Freedman, N. D., Grant, M., McLaughlin, J. T., and Hawrot, E. (1999) Biochemistry 38, 4912-4921), little is known about the accessibility of other residues within this region. By determining second-order rate constants for the reaction of cysteine mutants at alpha184-alpha197 with the thiol-specific biotin derivative (+)-biotinyl-3-maleimidopropionamidyl-3,6-dioxaoctanediamine , we now show that only very subtle differences in reactivity (approximately 10-fold) are detectable, arguing that the entire region is solvent-exposed. Importantly, biotinylation in the presence of saturating concentrations of the long neurotoxin alpha-Bgtx is significantly retarded for positions alphaW187C, alphaF189C, and reduced wild-type receptors (alphaCys(192) and alphaCys(193)), further emphasizing their major contribution to the alpha-Bgtx binding site. Interestingly, although biotinylation of position alphaV188C is not affected by the presence of alpha-Bgtx, erabutoxin a, which is a member of the short neurotoxin family, inhibits biotinylation at position alphaV188C, but not at alphaW187C or alphaF189C. Taken together, these results indicate that short and long neurotoxins establish interactions with distinct amino acids on the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. 相似文献
10.
Aryldiazonium salts as photoaffinity labels of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor PCP binding site 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
F Kotzyba-Hibert J Lagenbuch-Cachat J Jaganathen M Goeldner C Hirth 《FEBS letters》1985,182(2):297-301
Several aryldiazonium salts are described as irreversible blockers of the phencyclidine binding site of the nicotinic cholinergic receptor. A partial hydrophobic character increases the affinity of these salts for the phencyclidine binding site. Photoaffinity labelling with a tritiated diazonium salt in the presence of either carbamylcholine or alpha-bungarotoxin leads to incorporation of radioactivity into the 4 subunits of the receptor. Among these diazonium salts, an imidazole derivative is unique in that the photoinduced irreversible blocking in only effective when the receptor is in a desensitised state. 相似文献
11.
To characterize the structure of the agonist-binding site of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR), we have used [3H]acetylcholine mustard [( 3H]AChM), a reactive analog of acetylcholine, to identify residues contributing to the cation-binding subsite. Reaction of [3H]AChM, in its aziridinium form, with AChR-rich membrane suspensions, resulted initially in reversible, high affinity binding (K approximately 0.3 microM) followed by slow alkylation of the acetylcholine-binding site. Incorporation of label into AChR alpha-subunit was inhibited by agonists and competitive antagonists, but not by noncompetitive antagonists, and reaction with 3 microM [3H]AChM for 2 h resulted in specific alkylation of 0.6% of alpha-subunits. Within the alpha-subunit, greater than 90% of specific incorporation was contained within an 18-kDa Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteolytic fragment beginning at Val-46 and containing N-linked carbohydrate. To identify sites of specific alkylation, [3H]AChM-labeled alpha-subunit was digested with trypsin, and the digests were fractionated by reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography. Specifically labeled material was recovered within a single peak containing a peptide extending from Leu-80 to Lys-107. NH2-terminal amino acid sequencing revealed specific release of 3H in cycle 14 corresponding to alpha-subunit Tyr-93. Identification of Tyr-93 as the site of alkylation was confirmed by radiosequence analysis utilizing o-phthalaldehyde to establish that the released 3H originated from a peptide containing prolines at residues 2 and 9. Because [3H]AChM contains as its reactive group a positively charged quaternary aziridinium, alpha-subunit Tyr-93 is identified as contributing to the cation-binding domain of the AChR agonist-binding site. The selective reaction of [3H]AChM with tyrosyl rather than acidic side chains indicates the importance of aromatic interactions for the binding of the quaternary ammonium group, and the lack of reaction with the tyrosyl or acidic side chains within alpha 190-200 emphasizes the selective orientation of acetylcholine within its binding site. 相似文献
12.
Bixel MG Weise C Bolognesi ML Rosini M Brierly MJ Mellor IR Usherwood PN Melchiorre C Hucho F 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2001,276(9):6151-6160
To map the structure of a ligand-gated ion channel, we used the photolabile polyamine-containing toxin MR44 as photoaffinity label. MR44 binds with high affinity to the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in its closed channel conformation. The binding stoichiometry was two molecules of MR44 per receptor monomer. Upon UV irradiation of the receptor-ligand complex, (125)I-MR44 was incorporated into the receptor alpha-subunit. From proteolytic mapping studies, we conclude that the site of (125)I-MR44 cross-linking is contained in the sequence alpha His-186 to alpha Leu-199, which is part of the extracellular domain of the receptor. This sequence partially overlaps in its C-terminal region with one of the three loops that form the agonist-binding site. The agonist carbachol and the competitive antagonist alpha-bungarotoxin had only minor influence on the photocross-linking of (125)I-MR44. The site where the hydrophobic head group of (125)I-MR44 binds must therefore be located outside the zone that is sterically influenced by agonist bound at the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. In binding and photocross-linking experiments, the luminal noncompetitive inhibitors ethidium and triphenylmethylphosphonium were found to compete with (125)I-MR44. We conclude that the polyamine moiety of (125)I-MR44 interacts with the high affinity noncompetitive inhibitor site deep in the channel of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, while the aromatic ring of this compound binds in the upper part of the ion channel (i.e. in the vestibule) to a hydrophobic region on the alpha-subunit that is located in close proximity to the agonist binding site. The region of the alpha-subunit labeled by (125)I-MR44 should therefore be accessible from the luminal side of the vestibule. 相似文献
13.
14.
K E McLane X D Wu R Schoepfer J M Lindstrom B M Conti-Tronconi 《The Journal of biological chemistry》1991,266(23):15230-15239
The relationship between neuronal alpha-bungarotoxin binding proteins (alpha BGTBPs) and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor function in the brain of higher vertebrates has remained controversial for over a decade. Recently, the cDNAs for two homologous putative ligand binding subunits, designated alpha BGTBP alpha 1 and alpha BGTBP alpha 2, have been isolated on the basis of their homology to the N terminus of an alpha BGTBP purified from chick brain. In the present study, a panel of overlapping synthetic peptides corresponding to the complete chick brain alpha BGTBP alpha 1 subunit and residues 166-215 of the alpha BGTBP alpha 2 subunits were tested for their ability to bind 125I-alpha BGT. The sequence segments corresponding to alpha BGTBP alpha 1-(181-200) and alpha BGTBP alpha 2-(181-200) were found to consistently and specifically bind 125I-alpha BGT. The ability of these peptides to bind alpha BGT was significantly decreased by reduction and alkylation of the Cys residues at positions 190/191, whereas oxidation had little effect on alpha BGT binding activity. The relative affinities for alpha BGT of the peptide sequences alpha BGTBP alpha 1-(181-200) and alpha BGTBP alpha 2-(181-200) were compared with those of peptides corresponding to the sequence segments Torpedo alpha 1-(181-200) and chick muscle alpha 1-(179-198). In competition assays, the IC50 for alpha BGTBP alpha 1-(181-200) was 20-fold higher than that obtained for the other peptides (approximately 2 versus 40 microM). These results indicate that alpha BGTBP alpha 1 and alpha BGTBP alpha 2 are ligand binding subunits able to bind alpha BGT at sites homologous with nAChR alpha subunits and that these subunits may confer differential ligand binding properties on the two alpha BGTBP subtypes of which they are components. 相似文献
15.
16.
To characterize the structural requirements for ligand orientation compatible with activation of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR), we used Cys mutagenesis in conjunction with sulfhydryl-reactive reagents to tether primary or quaternary amines at defined positions within the agonist binding site of nAChRs containing mutant alpha- or gamma-subunits expressed in Xenopus oocytes. 4-(N-Maleimido)benzyltrimethylammonium and 2-aminoethylmethanethiosulfonate acted as irreversible antagonists when tethered at alphaY93C, alphaY198C, or gammaE57C, as well as at alphaN94C (2-aminoethylmethanethiosulfonate only). [2-(Trimethylammonium)-ethyl]-methanethiosulfonate (MTSET), which attaches thiocholine to binding site Cys, also acted as an irreversible antagonist when tethered at alphaY93C, alphaN94C, or gammaE57C. However, MTSET modification of alphaY198C resulted in prolonged activation of the nAChR not reversible by washing but inhibitable by subsequent exposure to non-competitive antagonists. Modification of alphaY198C (or any of the other positions tested) by [(trimethylammonium)methyl]methanethiosulfonate resulted only in irreversible inhibition, while modification of alphaY198C by [3-(trimethylammonium)propyl]methanethiosulfonate resulted in irreversible activation of nAChR, but at lower efficacy than by MTSET. Thus changing the length of the tethering arm by less than 1 A in either direction markedly effects the ability of the covalent trimethylammonium to activate the nAChR, and agonist activation depends on a very selective orientation of the quaternary ammonium within the agonist binding site. 相似文献
17.
alpha-Bungarotoxin blocks acetylcholine-mediated ion channel opening of peripheral acetylcholine receptors (AChR). A major binding region for alpha-bungarotoxin has been recently identified within parts of the segment 170-204 of the alpha-subunit. We used the Pepscan systematic peptide synthesis system to determine the minimum Torpedo AChR segment required for alpha-bungarotoxin binding and to investigate the role of each residue within this segment. Continuously overlapping decapeptides within alpha 179-203 and several decapeptides covering other alpha-subunit sequences showed that alpha 188-197 and alpha 189-198 exhibited the best 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding activity (KD = 7.3 x 10(-8) and 4.3 x 10(-8) M, respectively). Several continuously overlapping nona-, octa-, hepta-, hexa-, and tetrapeptides showed that the heptapeptide alpha 189-195 was the minimum sequence with high binding activity (KD = 5.6 x 10(-8)M). d-Tubocurarine, but not carbamylcholine, blocked toxin binding. Twenty-six analogs of the alpha 188-197, most having 1 residue substituted by Ala or Gly, showed that Tyr189, Tyr190, and especially Asp195 were indispensable for 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Cys192 and Cys193 could be substituted by other amino acids, proving that the disulfide bond between alpha 192-193 was not required for alpha-bungarotoxin binding. The decreased alpha-bungarotoxin binding capacity of the equivalent human muscle AChR alpha 188-197 peptide was the result of substitution of Tyr by Thr at alpha 189. 相似文献
18.
Wu P Ma D Pierzchala M Wu J Yang LC Mai X Chang X Schmidt-Glenewinkel T 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2005,280(22):20987-20994
The central nervous system of Drosophila melanogaster contains an alpha-bungarotoxin-binding protein with the properties expected of a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. This protein was purified 5800-fold from membranes prepared from Drosophila heads. The protein was solubilized with 1% Triton X-100 and 0.5 M sodium chloride and then purified using an alpha-cobratoxin column followed by a lentil lectin affinity column. The purified protein had a specific activity of 3.9 micromol of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites/g of protein. The subunit composition of the purified receptor was determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. This subunit profile was identical with that revealed by in situ labeling of the membrane-bound protein using the photolyzable methyl-4-azidobenzoimidate derivative of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin. The purified receptor reveals two different protein bands with molecular masses of 42 and 57 kDa. From sedimentation analysis of the purified protein complex in H2O and D2O and gel filtration, a mass of 270 kDa was calculated. The receptor has a s(20,w) of 9.4 and a Stoke's radius of 7.4 nm. The frictional coefficient was calculated to be 1.7 indicating a highly asymmetric protein complex compatible with a transmembrane protein forming an ion channel. The sequence of a peptide obtained after tryptic digestion of the 42-kDa protein allowed the specific identification of the Drosophila D alpha5 subunit by sequence comparison. A peptide-specific antibody raised against the D alpha5 subunit provides further evidence that this subunit is a component of an alpha-bungarotoxin binding nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from the central nervous system of Drosophila. 相似文献
19.
α-Bungarotoxin (α-Bgt), an α-neurotoxin, has been 14C-methylated by treatment with [14C]formaldehyde following NaCNBH3 reduction. The methylation rate is fast (about 84% methylation in 15 min), with 12 methyl groups incorporated per mole of α-Bgt or a mean of 1.7 methyl groups per available amine residue. The specific activity of α-[14C]Bgt is 768 mCi/mmol. Unlike most of the reported chemical modifications of α-neurotoxins, involving a high decrease of the toxin activity after modification, α-[14C]Bgt retains 100% of its unmodified ability to bind to both isolated acetylcholine receptor (AcChR) and AcChR-enriched membrane fragments prepared from Torpedo californica. This lysyl residue modification does not perturb the toxin binding activity, probably, because the net positive charges of the ?-amino groups and amino-terminal residue remain unaltered. 14C-Methylated α-Bgt appears better suited than 125I-α-Bgt for use in AcChR binding studies because of the longer half-life of the isotope, and the apparent high uniformity of labeling of the toxin preparations. 相似文献
20.
Scarselli M Spiga O Ciutti A Bernini A Bracci L Lelli B Lozzi L Calamandrei D Di Maro D Klein S Niccolai N 《Biochemistry》2002,41(5):1457-1463
A combinatorial library approach was used to produce synthetic peptides mimicking the snake neurotoxin binding site of nicotinic receptors. Among the sequences, which inhibited binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to muscle and neuronal nicotinic receptors, HRYYESSLPWYPD, a 14-amino acid peptide with considerably higher toxin-binding affinity than the other synthesized peptides, was selected, and the structure of its complex with the toxin was analyzed by NMR. Comparison of the solution structure of the free toxin and its complex with this peptide indicated that complex formation induced extensive conformational rearrangements mainly at finger II and the carboxy terminus of the protein. The peptidyl residues P10 and Y4 seemed to be critical for peptide folding and complex stability, respectively. The latter residue of the peptide strongly interacted with the protein by entering a small pocket delimited by D30, C33, S34, R36, and V39 toxin side chains. 相似文献