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1.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(6):2613-2622
The structural elements required for normal maturation and assembly of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha subunit were investigated by expression of mutated subunits in transfected fibroblasts. Normally, the wild-type alpha subunit acquires high affinity alpha bungarotoxin binding in a time-dependent manner; however, mutation of the 128 and/or 142 cysteines to either serine or alanine, as well as deletion of the entire 14 amino acids in this region abolished all detectable high affinity binding. Nonglycosylated subunits that had a serine to glycine mutation in the consensus sequence also did not efficiently attain high affinity binding to toxin. In contrast, mutation of the proline at position 136 to glycine or alanine, or a double mutation of the cysteines at position 192 and 193 to serines had no effect on the acquisition of high affinity toxin binding. These data suggest that a disulfide bridge between cysteines 128 and 142 and oligosaccharide addition at asparagine 141 are required for the normal maturation of alpha subunit as assayed by high affinity toxin binding. The unassembled wild-type alpha subunit expressed in fibroblasts is normally degraded with a t1/2 of 2 h; upon assembly with the delta subunit, the degradation rate slows significantly (t1/2 greater than 13 h). All mutated alpha subunits retained the capacity to assemble with a delta subunit coexpressed in fibroblasts; however, mutated alpha subunits that were not glycosylated or did not acquire high affinity toxin binding were rapidly degraded (t1/2 = 20 min to 2 h) regardless of whether or not they assembled with the delta subunit. Assembly and rapid degradation of nonglycosylated acetylcholine receptor (AChR) subunits and subunit complexes were also observed in tunicamycin- treated BC3H-1 cells, a mouse musclelike cell line that normally expresses functional AChR. Hence, rapid degradation may be one form of regulation assuring that only correctly processed and assembled subunits accumulate, and ultimately make functional receptors in AChR- expressing cells.  相似文献   

2.
Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) consists of two noncovalently joined alpha and beta subunits similar to the other glycoprotein hormones. To study the function of the individual disulfide bonds in subunit assembly and secretion, site-directed mutagenesis was used to convert the 12 cysteine (Cys) residues in the beta subunit of hCG to either alanine or serine. Both cysteines of proposed disulfide pairs were also mutated. These mutant hCG beta genes were transfected alone or together with the wild-type alpha gene into Chinese hamster ovary cells. Only 3-10% assembly could be achieved with derivatives containing single Cys mutations at positions 26, 110, 72, and 90, whereas no assembly was detected with the other 8 mutants. However, double mutations of pairs 26-110 or 23-72 showed increased dimer formation (11 and 36%, respectively). The secretion rate of individual mutants varied significantly. Whereas the Cys-23 and 72 mutants were secreted normally (t1/2 = 140-190 min), the Cys-26 mutant was secreted faster (t1/2 = 70 min), and the other 9 mutants were secreted slower (t1/2 = 280-440 min); mutations of both Cys at 26 and 110 caused much faster secretion (t1/2 = 34 min). Although the secretion rate of these mutants differed, they were quantitatively recovered in the medium except for mutant Cys-88, Cys-23-72, and Cys-34-88 (40, 55, and 10% secreted, respectively). Thus, interruption of any disulfide bond in the hCG beta subunit alters the structure sufficiently to block dimer formation and in some cases slow secretion, although the stability for most of the mutant hCG beta subunits is not greatly affected. The data indicate that interruption of any hCG beta disulfide bond generates different structural forms that are unable to assemble with the alpha subunit, and that the structural requirements for stability and assembly are different.  相似文献   

3.
M Criado  V Sarin  J L Fox  J Lindstrom 《Biochemistry》1986,25(10):2839-2846
The sequence alpha 127-143 of the alpha subunit of the acetylcholine receptor has been proposed to contain several important features: (1) the acetylcholine binding site, (2) the only N-glycosylation site of the alpha subunit, at asparagine-alpha 141, and (3) two cysteine residues, at alpha 128 and alpha 142, that may participate in a disulfide bond known to be near the binding site. We tested these hypotheses by using antisera to receptor and its subunits and monoclonal antibodies to the synthetic peptide alpha 127-143 cyclized by a disulfide bond between alpha 128 and alpha 142. Antisera to receptor and its alpha subunit were able to immunoprecipitate the iodinated peptide, and this reaction was inhibited by soluble receptor, but not by membrane-bound receptor. alpha-Bungarotoxin did not inhibit antiserum binding to solubilized receptor. Similarly, cholinergic ligands had little or no effect on binding to immobilized receptors of anti-peptide monoclonal antibodies. In addition, these monoclonal antibodies, when bound to the receptor, did not affect toxin binding kinetics. By contrast, preincubation with concanavalin A did inhibit monoclonal antibody binding. Reduction of the receptor significantly decreased the binding of three of the monoclonal antibodies, but subsequent alkylation with N-ethylmaleimide or the affinity labeling reagent bromoacetylcholine had no additional effect on binding. A dithiothreitol concentration about 100-fold higher that the one needed to reduce the disulfide near the acetylcholine binding site was necessary to inhibit monoclonal antibody binding. We conclude that the sequence alpha 127-143 is not fully exposed on the surface when the receptor is in the membrane.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
This study reports the synthesis of a disulfide-looped peptide corresponding to residues 125-147 (Cys 128-Cys 142) of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) of human skeletal muscle, H alpha 125-147 (Lys-Ser-Tyr-Cys-Glu-Ile-Ile-Val-Thr-His-Phe-Pro-Phe-Asp-Glu-Gln- Asn-Cys-Ser-Nle-Lys Leu-Gly), and a nondisulfide-looped analogue, H alpha 125-147(S) (Lys-Ser-Tyr-Ser-Glu-Ile-Ile-Val-Thr-His-Phe-Pro-Phe-Asp-Glu- Gln-Asn-Cys-Ser-Nle-Lys-Leu-Gly), in which the amino acid Cys 128 was replaced with serine. Both peptides induced antigen-specific helper T cell responses, as evidenced in vitro by lymph node cell proliferation and in vivo by production of anti-AChR antibodies. Rats immunized with 100 micrograms of either synthetic peptide, without conjugation to a carrier, produced anti-peptide antibodies which bound to native AChR in immunoprecipitation assays and induced modulation of membrane-bound AChR from cultured human myotubes. Both peptides also induced electrophysiologic and biochemical signs of experimental autoimmune myasthenia gravis. Thus, region 125-147 of the AChR alpha-subunit is at least partly exposed extracellularly in human muscle and contains one or more autoantigenic sites capable of stimulating T cells and B cells. Disulfide-linkage between residues Cys 128 and Cys 142 is not essential for myasthenogenicity.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
7.
The epithelial Na(+) channel (ENaC) is typically formed by three homologous subunits (alpha, beta, and gamma) that possess a characteristic large extracellular loop (ECL) containing 16 conserved cysteine (Cys) residues. We investigated the functional role of these Cys residues in Na(+) self-inhibition, an allosteric inhibition of ENaC activity by extracellular Na(+). All 16 Cys residues within alpha and gamma ECLs and selected beta ECL Cys residues were individually mutated to alanine or serine residues. The Na(+) self-inhibition response of wild type and mutant channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes was determined by whole cell voltage clamp. Individual mutation of eight alpha (Cys-1, -4, -5, -6, -7, -10, -13, or -16), one beta (Cys-7), and nine gamma (Cys-3, -4, -6, -7, -10, -11, -12, -13, or -16) residues significantly reduced the magnitude of Na(+) self-inhibition. Na(+) self-inhibition was eliminated by simultaneous mutations of either the last three alpha ECL Cys residues (Cys-14, -15, and -16) or Cys-7 within both alpha and gamma ECLs. By analyzing the Na(+) self-inhibition responses and the effects of a methanethiosulfonate reagent on channel currents in single and double Cys mutants, we identified five Cys pairs within the alphaECL (alphaCys-1/alphaCys-6, alphaCys-4/alphaCys-5, alphaCys-7/alphaCys-16, alphaCys-10/alphaCys-13, and alphaCys-11/alphaCys-12) and one pair within the gammaECL (gammaCys-7/gammaCys-16) that likely form intrasubunit disulfide bonds. We conclude that approximately half of the ECL Cys residues in the alpha and gamma ENaC subunits are required to establish the tertiary structure that ensures a proper Na(+) self-inhibition response, likely by formation of multiple intrasubunit disulfide bonds.  相似文献   

8.
We have investigated the mechanisms of assembly and transport to the cell surface of the mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in transiently transfected COS cells. In cells transfected with all four subunit cDNAs, AChR was expressed on the surface with properties resembling those seen in mouse muscle cells (Gu, Y., A. F. Franco, Jr., P.D. Gardner, J. B. Lansman, J. R. Forsayeth, and Z. W. Hall. 1990. Neuron. 5:147-157). When incomplete combinations of AChR subunits were expressed, surface binding of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin was not detected except in the case of alpha beta gamma which expressed less than 15% of that seen with all four subunits. Immunoprecipitation and sucrose gradient sedimentation experiments showed that in cells expressing pairs of subunits, alpha delta and alpha gamma heterodimers were formed, but alpha beta was not. When three subunits were expressed, alpha delta beta and alpha gamma beta complexes were formed. Variation of the ratios of the four subunit cDNAs used in the transfection mixture showed that surface AChR expression was decreased by high concentrations of delta or gamma cDNAs in a mutually competitive manner. High expression of delta or gamma subunits also each inhibited formation of a heterodimer with alpha and the other subunit. These results are consistent with a defined pathway for AChR assembly in which alpha delta and alpha gamma heterodimers are formed first, followed by association with the beta subunit and with each other to form the complete AChR.  相似文献   

9.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) is a pentameric transmembrane protein (alpha 2 beta gamma delta) that binds the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh) and transduces this binding into the opening of a cation selective channel. The agonist, competitive antagonist, and snake toxin binding functions of the AChR are associated with the alpha subunit (Kao et al., 1984; Tzartos and Changeux, 1984; Wilson et al., 1985; Kao and Karlin, 1986; Pederson et al., 1986). We used site-directed mutagenesis and expression of AChR in Xenopus oocytes to identify amino acid residues critical for ligand binding and channel activation. Several mutations in the alpha subunit sequence were constructed based on information from sequence homology and from previous biochemical (Barkas et al., 1987; Dennis et al., 1988; Middleton and Cohen, 1990) and spectroscopic (Pearce and Hawrot, 1990; Pearce et al., 1990) studies. We have identified one mutation, Tyr190 to Phe (Y190F), that had a dramatic effect on ligand binding and channel activation. These mutant channels required more than 50-fold higher concentrations of ACh for channel activation than did wild type channels. This functional change is largely accounted for by a comparable shift in the agonist binding affinity, as assessed by the ability of ACh to compete with alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Other mutations at nearby conserved positions of the alpha subunit (H186F, P194S, Y198F) produce less dramatic changes in channel properties. Our results demonstrate that ligand binding and channel gating are separable properties of the receptor protein, and that Tyr190 appears to play a specific role in the receptor site for acetylcholine.  相似文献   

10.
The four human glycoprotein hormones are heterodimers that contain a common alpha subunit and a hormone-specific beta subunit. Within this hormone family, 23 amino acid sequences from 11 mammalian species are available. There are 19 invariant amino acid residues in the beta subunits, 12 of which are Cys that form six disulfide bonds. Of the remaining seven conserved amino acid residues, we have investigated the role of an Asp which occurs at position 99 in human choriogonadotropin beta (hCG beta). Site-directed mutagenesis was used to replace hCG beta Asp99 with three residues, Glu, Asn, and Arg, and to prepare an inversion double mutant protein, Arg94----Asp and Asp99----Arg. The cDNAs were placed in a eukaryotic expression vector, and the plasmids were transiently transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells containing a stably integrated gene for bovine alpha. Radioimmunoassays demonstrated that the mutant forms of hCG beta were capable of subunit assembly to the same extent as hCG beta wild type. The heterologous heterodimers were assayed in vitro using transformed mouse Leydig cells (MA-10) by competitive inhibition of 125I-hCG binding and stimulation of progesterone production. The gonadotropins containing Glu and Asn were active, although the potency was less than that associated with the hCG beta wild type-containing gonadotropin. In contrast, the Arg99-containing mutant protein and the inversion mutant protein Asp94/Arg99 were devoid of activity. Thus, in hCG beta Asp99 can be substituted with certain residues without total loss of function, although replacement with a positively charged residue leads to an inactive heterodimer. The primary role of Asp99 in hCG beta seems to involve, either directly or indirectly, receptor recognition.  相似文献   

11.
Sodium channels consist of a pore-forming alpha subunit and auxiliary beta 1 and beta 2 subunits. The subunit beta 1 alters the kinetics and voltage-dependence of sodium channels expressed in Xenopus oocytes or mammalian cells. Functional modulation in oocytes depends on specific regions in the N-terminal extracellular domain of beta 1, but does not require the intracellular C-terminal domain. Functional modulation is qualitatively different in mammalian cells, and thus could involve different molecular mechanisms. As a first step toward testing this hypothesis, we examined modulation of brain Na(V)1.2a sodium channel alpha subunits expressed in Chinese hamster lung cells by a mutant beta1 construct with 34 amino acids deleted from the C-terminus. This deletion mutation did not modulate sodium channel function in this cell system. Co-immunoprecipitation data suggest that this loss of functional modulation was caused by inefficient association of the mutant beta 1 with alpha, despite high levels of expression of the mutant protein. In Xenopus oocytes, injection of approximately 10,000 times more mutant beta 1 RNA was required to achieve the level of functional modulation observed with injection of full-length beta 1. Together, these findings suggest that the C-terminal cytoplasmic domain of beta 1 is an important determinant of beta1 binding to the sodium channel alpha subunit in both mammalian cells and Xenopus oocytes.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
P Blount  J P Merlie 《Neuron》1989,3(3):349-357
We have stably expressed in fibroblasts different pairs of alpha and non-alpha subunits of the mouse muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The gamma and delta, but not the beta, subunits associated efficiently with the alpha subunit, and they extensively modified its binding characteristics. The alpha gamma and alpha delta complexes formed distinctly different high affinity binding sites for the competitive antagonist d-tubocurarine that, together, completely accounted for the two nonequivalent antagonist binding sites in native AChR. The alpha delta complex and native AChR had similar affinities for the agonist carbamylcholine. In contrast, although the alpha gamma complex contains the higher affinity competitive antagonist binding site, it had an affinity for carbamylcholine that was an order of magnitude less than that of the alpha delta complex or the AChR. The comparatively low agonist affinity of the alpha gamma complex may represent an allosterically regulated binding site in the native AChR. These data support a model of two nonequivalent binding sites within the AChR and imply that the basis for this nonequivalence is the association of the alpha subunit with the gamma or delta subunit.  相似文献   

14.
Ligand-gated ion channels respond to specific neurotransmitters by transiently opening an integral membrane ion-selective pore, allowing ions to move down their electrochemical gradient. A distinguishing feature of all members of the ligand-gated ion channel superfamily is the presence of a 13-amino acid disulfide loop (Cys-loop) in the extracellular ligand-binding domain. Structural data derived from the acetylcholine receptor place this loop at the interface between the ligand-binding domain and the transmembrane pore-forming domain where it is ideally located to participate in coupling ligand binding to channel opening. We have introduced specific mutations into a conserved motif at the mid-point of the Cys-loop of the GABA A receptor subunits alpha1, beta2 and gamma2S where the sequence reads aromatic, proline, aliphatic (ArProAl motif). Receptors carrying a mutation in the Cys-loop of one of their subunits were expressed in L929 cells and responses to both GABA and drugs were assessed using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. Drug potentiation and direct activation were significantly enhanced by mutations in this Cys-loop but these effects were subunit-dependent. Currents in response to agonists were larger when mutations were carried in the alpha and beta subunits but not in the gamma subunit. In contrast, potentiation of current responses by diazepam, etomidate and pentobarbital were all enhanced when mutations were carried in the alpha and gamma subunits, but not the beta subunit. Since the disruption of interactions mediated through the ArProAl motif enhances the mutant receptor's response to both agonist and drugs we suggest that this motif in the Cys-loop of the wild-type receptor participates in interactions that create activation barriers to conformational changes during channel gating.  相似文献   

15.
A conserved feature of all nicotinic receptors is the presence of a readily reducible disulfide bond adjacent to the acetylcholine binding site. Previously we showed that in intact receptor from Torpedo californica electric tissue reduction of this disulfide followed by affinity alkylation with 4-(N-maleimido)benzyltri[3H] methylammonium iodide specifically and uniquely labels the alpha subunit residues Cys-192 and Cys-193. To identify all of the half-cystinyl residues contributing to the binding site disulfide(s), we have now reduced receptor under mild conditions and alkylated with a mixture of 4-(N-maleimido)benzyltri[3H]methylammonium iodide and N-[1-14C]ethylmaleimide and find that Cys-192 and Cys-193 are labeled exclusively. Furthermore, from unreduced receptor we have isolated two cyanogen bromide peptides of alpha, one containing Cys-192 and Cys-193, and the other containing Cys-128 and Cys-142 (which are the other potential contributors to the binding site disulfide(s]. These isolated peptides incorporate iodo[1-14C]acetamide only following reduction by dithiothreitol. Our results demonstrate that: 1) the binding site disulfide is between Cys-192 and Cys-193; 2) Cys-128 is disulfide-cross-linked to Cys-142; and 3) under conditions that reduce Cys-192 and Cys-193 completely, Cys-128 and Cys-142 remain cross-linked. At the acetylcholine binding site, agonists induce a local conformational change that stabilizes the binding site disulfide against reduction. We suggest that a transition between two stable conformations of the vicinal disulfide, both involving a nonplanar cis peptide bond between Cys-192 and Cys-193, is associated with receptor activation by agonists.  相似文献   

16.
The N-terminal extracellular domain (ECD; amino acids 1-208) of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha7 subunit, the only human AChR subunit known to assemble as a homopentamer, was expressed as a glycosylated form in the yeast Pichia pastoris in order to obtain a native-like model of the extracellular part of an intact pentameric nicotinic AChR. This molecule, alpha7-ECD, although able to bind the specific ligand alpha-bungarotoxin, existed mainly in the form of microaggregates. Substitution of Cys-116 in the alpha7-ECD with serine led to a decrease in microaggregate size. A second mutant form, alpha7-ECD(C116S,Cys-loop), was generated in which, in addition to the C116S mutation, the hydrophobic Cys-loop (Cys(128)-Cys(142)) was replaced by the corresponding hydrophilic Cys-loop from the snail glial cell acetylcholine-binding protein. This second mutant protein was water-soluble, expressed at a moderate level (0.5 +/- 0.1 mg/liter), and had a size corresponding approximately to a pentamer as judged by gel filtration and electron microscopy studies. It also bound (125)I-alpha-bungarotoxin with relatively high affinity (K(d) = 57 nm), the binding being inhibited by unlabeled alpha-bungarotoxin, d-tubocurarine, or nicotine (K(i) = 0.8 x 10(-7) m, K(i) = 1 x 10(-5) m, and K(i) = 0.9 x 10(-2) m, respectively). All three constructs were expressed as glycosylated forms, but in vitro deglycosylation reduced the heterogeneity without affecting their ligand binding properties. These results show that alpha7-ECD(C116S,Cys-loop) was expressed in P. pastoris as an oligomer (probably a pentamer) with a near native conformation and that its deglycosylated form seems to be suitable starting material for structural studies on the ligand-binding domain of a neurotransmitter receptor.  相似文献   

17.
We have investigated receptor function and epitope expression of recombinant alpha(IIb)beta(3) mutated at Cys(177) or Cys(273) in the I-like domain as well as Cys(598), located in the fourth repeat of the membrane-proximal cysteine-rich region and mutated in a Glanzmann's thrombasthenia type II patient. The beta(3) mutants beta(3)C177A, beta(3)C273A, and beta(3)C598Y exhibited a decreased electrophoretic mobility in SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nonreducing conditions, confirming the disruption of the respective disulfide loops. Despite reduced surface expression, the alpha(IIb)beta(3)C177A, alpha(IIb)beta(3)C273A, and alpha(IIb)beta(3)C598Y receptors mediated cell adhesion to immobilized fibrinogen and translocated into focal adhesion plaques. The beta(3)C598Y mutation, but not the beta(3)C177A or beta(3)C273A mutations, induced spontaneous binding of the ligand mimetic monoclonal antibody PAC-1, while the beta(3)C177A and beta(3)C273A mutants exhibited reduced complex stability in the absence of Ca(2+). Epitope mapping of function-blocking monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) allowed the identification of two distinct subgroups; mAbs A2A9, pl2-46, 10E5, and P256 did not interact with alpha(IIb)beta(3)C273A and bound only weakly to alpha(IIb)beta(3)C177A, while mAbs AP2, LM609 and 7E3 bound normally to mutant alpha(IIb)beta(3)C273A, but interacted only weakly with mutant alpha(IIb)beta(3)C177A. Furthermore, a cryptic epitope recognized by mAb 4D10G3 and not exposed on wild type alpha(IIb)beta(3) became accessible only on mutant alpha(IIb)beta(3)C177A and was mapped to the 60-kDa chymotrypsin fragment of beta(3). Finally, the ligand-induced binding site (LIBS) epitopes AP5, D3, LIBS1, and LIBS2 were spontaneously expressed on all three mutants independent of RGDS or dithiothreitol treatment. Our results provide evidence that disruption of a single cysteine disulfide bond in the cysteine-rich repeat domain, but not in the I-like domain, activates integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3). In contrast, disruption of each of the disulfide bonds in the two long insertions of the I-like domain predicted to be in close contact with the alpha subunit beta-propeller domain affect the stability of the alpha(IIb)beta(3) heterodimer and inhibit complex-specific mAb binding without affecting the RGD binding capacity of the metal ion-dependent adhesion site-like domain.  相似文献   

18.
The catalytic alpha subunit of casein kinase II contains the 11 conserved domains characteristic of all protein kinases. Domain II and VII are involved in nucleotide binding and phosphotransfer. Two residues of the alpha subunit, Val-66 (in domain II) and Trp-176 (in domain VII), were changed to Ala-66 and Phe-176, the residues present in more than 95% of the identified protein kinase sequences. These changes altered the selectivity of the alpha subunit for ATP and GTP. The Ala-66 mutant showed an increase in the Km value for GTP from 45 to 71 microM, while the Km value for ATP decreased from 13 to 9 microM. The Km value for ATP with the Phe-176 mutant showed a decrease from 13 to 7 microM. A double mutant of Ala-66/Phe-176 showed the combined effects, with a Km of 6 microM for ATP and 70 microM for GTP. Alteration of Trp-176 to Lys-176, an amino acid which is not present in the corresponding position of any known protein kinase, resulted in a lack of phosphotransferase activity. The mutations, Val-66 to Ala-66 and Trp-176 to Phe-176, also altered the interaction of the alpha subunit with the regulatory beta subunit. In contrast to the wild-type alpha subunit, which was stimulated 4-fold by addition of the beta subunit, the Ala-66 and Ala-66/Phe-176 mutants were not stimulated by the beta subunit, while the Phe-176 mutant was stimulated only 2.5-fold. All of the reconstituted holoenzymes were similar in molecular weight to the native holoenzyme. The stimulation of the phosphotransferase activity toward beta-casein B by spermine and polylysine, which is mediated by the beta subunit, was similar for holoenzymes reconstituted with either wild-type or mutant alpha subunits. Therefore, binding of the beta subunit appears to alter the active site of the alpha subunit directly or indirectly by inducing a conformational change. Ala-66 and Phe-176 mutations appear to change the structure of the alpha subunit sufficiently so that interaction of the subunits is altered and the stimulatory effect of the beta subunit is reduced or eliminated.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
A structural and dynamic model for the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Folding of the five polypeptide subunits (alpha 2 beta gamma delta) of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) into a functional structural model is described. The principles used to arrange the sequences into a structure include: (1) hydrophobicity----membrane-crossing segments; (2) amphipathic character----ion-carrying segments (ion channel with single group rotations); (3) molecular shape (elongated, pentagonal cylinder)----folding dimensions of exobilayer portion; (4) choice of acetylcholine binding sites----specific folding of exobilayer segments; (5) location of reducible disulfides (near agonist binding site)----additional specification of exobilayer arrangement; (6) genetic homology----consistency of functional group choices; (7) noncompetitive antagonist labeling----arrangement of bilayer helices. The AChR model is divided into three parts: (a) exobilayer consisting of 11 antiparallel beta-strands from each subunit; (b) bilayer consisting of four hydrophobic and one amphiphilic alpha-helix from each subunit; (c) cytoplasmic consisting of one (folded) loop from each subunit. The exobilayer strands can form a closed 'flower' (the 'resting state') which is opened ('activated') by agonists bound perpendicular to the strands. Rearrangement of the agonists to a strand-parallel position and partial closing of the 'flower' leads to a desensitized receptor. The actions of acetylcholine and succinoyl and suberoyl bis-cholines are clarified by the model. The opening and closing of the exobilayer 'flower' controls access to the ion channel which is composed of the five amphiphilic bilayer helices. A molecular mechanism for ion flow in the channel is given. Openings interrupted by short duration closings (50 microseconds) depend upon channel group motions. The unusual photolabeling of intrabilayer serines in alpha, beta and delta subunits but not in gamma subunits near the binding site for non-competitive antagonists is explained along with a mechanism for the action of these antagonists such as phencyclidine. The unusual alpha 192Cys-193Cys disulfide may have a special peptide arrangement, such as a cis-peptide bond to a following proline (G.A. Petsko and E.M. Kosower, unpublished results). The position of phosphorylatable sites and proline-rich segments are noted for the cytoplasmic loops. The dynamic behavior of the AChR channel and many different experimental results can be interpreted in terms of the model. An example is the lowering of ionic conductivity on substitution of bovine for Torpedo delta M2 segment. The model represents a useful construct for the design of experiments on AChR.  相似文献   

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