Cargando…

The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element

We describe the functional consequences of mutations in the linker between the second and third transmembrane segments (M2–M3L) of muscle acetylcholine receptors at the single-channel level. Hydrophobic mutations (Ile, Cys, and Phe) placed near the middle of the linker of the α subunit (αS269) prolo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Grosman, Claudio, Salamone, Frank N., Sine, Steven M., Auerbach, Anthony
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2233691/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10962011
_version_ 1782150284653363200
author Grosman, Claudio
Salamone, Frank N.
Sine, Steven M.
Auerbach, Anthony
author_facet Grosman, Claudio
Salamone, Frank N.
Sine, Steven M.
Auerbach, Anthony
author_sort Grosman, Claudio
collection PubMed
description We describe the functional consequences of mutations in the linker between the second and third transmembrane segments (M2–M3L) of muscle acetylcholine receptors at the single-channel level. Hydrophobic mutations (Ile, Cys, and Phe) placed near the middle of the linker of the α subunit (αS269) prolong apparent openings elicited by low concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh), whereas hydrophilic mutations (Asp, Lys, and Gln) are without effect. Because the gating kinetics of the αS269I receptor (a congenital myasthenic syndrome mutant) in the presence of ACh are too fast, choline was used as the agonist. This revealed an ∼92-fold increased gating equilibrium constant, which is consistent with an ∼10-fold decreased EC(50) in the presence of ACh. With choline, this mutation accelerates channel opening ∼28-fold, slows channel closing ∼3-fold, but does not affect agonist binding to the closed state. These ratios suggest that, with ACh, αS269I acetylcholine receptors open at a rate of ∼1.4 × 10(6) s(−1) and close at a rate of ∼760 s(−1). These gating rate constants, together with the measured duration of apparent openings at low ACh concentrations, further suggest that ACh dissociates from the diliganded open receptor at a rate of ∼140 s(−1). Ile mutations at positions flanking αS269 impair, rather than enhance, channel gating. Inserting or deleting one residue from this linker in the α subunit increased and decreased, respectively, the apparent open time approximately twofold. Contrary to the αS269I mutation, Ile mutations at equivalent positions of the β, ε, and δ subunits do not affect apparent open-channel lifetimes. However, in β and ε, shifting the mutation one residue to the NH(2)-terminal end enhances channel gating. The overall results indicate that this linker is a control element whose hydrophobicity determines channel gating in a position- and subunit-dependent manner. Characterization of the transition state of the gating reaction suggests that during channel opening the M2–M3L of the α subunit moves before the corresponding linkers of the β and ε subunits.
format Text
id pubmed-2233691
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2000
publisher The Rockefeller University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-22336912008-04-22 The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element Grosman, Claudio Salamone, Frank N. Sine, Steven M. Auerbach, Anthony J Gen Physiol Original Article We describe the functional consequences of mutations in the linker between the second and third transmembrane segments (M2–M3L) of muscle acetylcholine receptors at the single-channel level. Hydrophobic mutations (Ile, Cys, and Phe) placed near the middle of the linker of the α subunit (αS269) prolong apparent openings elicited by low concentrations of acetylcholine (ACh), whereas hydrophilic mutations (Asp, Lys, and Gln) are without effect. Because the gating kinetics of the αS269I receptor (a congenital myasthenic syndrome mutant) in the presence of ACh are too fast, choline was used as the agonist. This revealed an ∼92-fold increased gating equilibrium constant, which is consistent with an ∼10-fold decreased EC(50) in the presence of ACh. With choline, this mutation accelerates channel opening ∼28-fold, slows channel closing ∼3-fold, but does not affect agonist binding to the closed state. These ratios suggest that, with ACh, αS269I acetylcholine receptors open at a rate of ∼1.4 × 10(6) s(−1) and close at a rate of ∼760 s(−1). These gating rate constants, together with the measured duration of apparent openings at low ACh concentrations, further suggest that ACh dissociates from the diliganded open receptor at a rate of ∼140 s(−1). Ile mutations at positions flanking αS269 impair, rather than enhance, channel gating. Inserting or deleting one residue from this linker in the α subunit increased and decreased, respectively, the apparent open time approximately twofold. Contrary to the αS269I mutation, Ile mutations at equivalent positions of the β, ε, and δ subunits do not affect apparent open-channel lifetimes. However, in β and ε, shifting the mutation one residue to the NH(2)-terminal end enhances channel gating. The overall results indicate that this linker is a control element whose hydrophobicity determines channel gating in a position- and subunit-dependent manner. Characterization of the transition state of the gating reaction suggests that during channel opening the M2–M3L of the α subunit moves before the corresponding linkers of the β and ε subunits. The Rockefeller University Press 2000-09-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2233691/ /pubmed/10962011 Text en © 2000 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Grosman, Claudio
Salamone, Frank N.
Sine, Steven M.
Auerbach, Anthony
The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element
title The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element
title_full The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element
title_fullStr The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element
title_full_unstemmed The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element
title_short The Extracellular Linker of Muscle Acetylcholine Receptor Channels Is a Gating Control Element
title_sort extracellular linker of muscle acetylcholine receptor channels is a gating control element
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2233691/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10962011
work_keys_str_mv AT grosmanclaudio theextracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT salamonefrankn theextracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT sinestevenm theextracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT auerbachanthony theextracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT grosmanclaudio extracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT salamonefrankn extracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT sinestevenm extracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement
AT auerbachanthony extracellularlinkerofmuscleacetylcholinereceptorchannelsisagatingcontrolelement