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No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta

Insect odorant receptors (ORs) are 7-transmembrane receptors with inverse membrane topology. They associate with the conserved ion channel Orco. As chaperon, Orco maintains ORs in cilia and, as pacemaker channel, Orco controls spontaneous activity in olfactory receptor neurons. Odorant binding to OR...

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Autores principales: Nolte, Andreas, Gawalek, Petra, Koerte, Sarah, Wei, HongYing, Schumann, Robin, Werckenthin, Achim, Krieger, Jürgen, Stengl, Monika
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5102459/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27829053
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166060
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author Nolte, Andreas
Gawalek, Petra
Koerte, Sarah
Wei, HongYing
Schumann, Robin
Werckenthin, Achim
Krieger, Jürgen
Stengl, Monika
author_facet Nolte, Andreas
Gawalek, Petra
Koerte, Sarah
Wei, HongYing
Schumann, Robin
Werckenthin, Achim
Krieger, Jürgen
Stengl, Monika
author_sort Nolte, Andreas
collection PubMed
description Insect odorant receptors (ORs) are 7-transmembrane receptors with inverse membrane topology. They associate with the conserved ion channel Orco. As chaperon, Orco maintains ORs in cilia and, as pacemaker channel, Orco controls spontaneous activity in olfactory receptor neurons. Odorant binding to ORs opens OR-Orco receptor ion channel complexes in heterologous expression systems. It is unknown, whether this also occurs in vivo. As an alternative to this ionotropic transduction, experimental evidence is accumulating for metabotropic odor transduction, implicating that insect ORs couple to G-proteins. Resulting second messengers gate various ion channels. They generate the sensillum potential that elicits phasic-tonic action potentials (APs) followed by late, long-lasting pheromone responses. Because it is still unclear how and when Orco opens after odor-OR-binding, we used tip recordings to examine in vivo the effects of the Orco antagonist OLC15 and the amilorides MIA and HMA on bombykal transduction in the hawkmoth Manduca sexta. In contrast to OLC15 both amilorides decreased the pheromone-dependent sensillum potential amplitude and the frequency of the phasic AP response. Instead, OLC15 decreased spontaneous activity, increased latencies of phasic-, and decreased frequencies of late, long-lasting pheromone responses Zeitgebertime-dependently. Our results suggest no involvement for Orco in the primary transduction events, in contrast to amiloride-sensitive channels. Instead of an odor-gated ionotropic receptor, Orco rather acts as a voltage- and apparently second messenger-gated pacemaker channel controlling the membrane potential and hence threshold and kinetics of the pheromone response.
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spelling pubmed-51024592016-11-18 No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta Nolte, Andreas Gawalek, Petra Koerte, Sarah Wei, HongYing Schumann, Robin Werckenthin, Achim Krieger, Jürgen Stengl, Monika PLoS One Research Article Insect odorant receptors (ORs) are 7-transmembrane receptors with inverse membrane topology. They associate with the conserved ion channel Orco. As chaperon, Orco maintains ORs in cilia and, as pacemaker channel, Orco controls spontaneous activity in olfactory receptor neurons. Odorant binding to ORs opens OR-Orco receptor ion channel complexes in heterologous expression systems. It is unknown, whether this also occurs in vivo. As an alternative to this ionotropic transduction, experimental evidence is accumulating for metabotropic odor transduction, implicating that insect ORs couple to G-proteins. Resulting second messengers gate various ion channels. They generate the sensillum potential that elicits phasic-tonic action potentials (APs) followed by late, long-lasting pheromone responses. Because it is still unclear how and when Orco opens after odor-OR-binding, we used tip recordings to examine in vivo the effects of the Orco antagonist OLC15 and the amilorides MIA and HMA on bombykal transduction in the hawkmoth Manduca sexta. In contrast to OLC15 both amilorides decreased the pheromone-dependent sensillum potential amplitude and the frequency of the phasic AP response. Instead, OLC15 decreased spontaneous activity, increased latencies of phasic-, and decreased frequencies of late, long-lasting pheromone responses Zeitgebertime-dependently. Our results suggest no involvement for Orco in the primary transduction events, in contrast to amiloride-sensitive channels. Instead of an odor-gated ionotropic receptor, Orco rather acts as a voltage- and apparently second messenger-gated pacemaker channel controlling the membrane potential and hence threshold and kinetics of the pheromone response. Public Library of Science 2016-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC5102459/ /pubmed/27829053 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166060 Text en © 2016 Nolte et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nolte, Andreas
Gawalek, Petra
Koerte, Sarah
Wei, HongYing
Schumann, Robin
Werckenthin, Achim
Krieger, Jürgen
Stengl, Monika
No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta
title No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta
title_full No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta
title_fullStr No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta
title_full_unstemmed No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta
title_short No Evidence for Ionotropic Pheromone Transduction in the Hawkmoth Manduca sexta
title_sort no evidence for ionotropic pheromone transduction in the hawkmoth manduca sexta
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5102459/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27829053
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0166060
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