Characterization of a glycine receptor domain that controls the binding and gating mechanisms of the beta-amino acid agonist, taurine


Autoria(s): Han, Nian-Lin R.; Haddrill, Justine L.; Lynch, Joseph W.
Contribuinte(s)

Brian Collier

Data(s)

01/11/2001

Resumo

The beta -amino acid, taurine, is a full agonist of the human glycine receptor al subunit when recombinantly expressed in a mammalian (HEK293) cell line, but a partial agonist of the same receptor when expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Several residues in the Ala101-Thr112 domain have previously been identified as determinants of beta -amino acid binding and gating mechanisms in Xenopus oocyte-expressed receptors. The present study used the substituted cysteine accessibility method to investigate the role of this domain in controlling taurine-specific binding and gating mechanisms of glycine receptors recombinantly expressed in mammalian cells. Asn102 and Glu103 are identified as taurine and glycine binding sites, whereas Ala101 is eliminated as a possible binding site. The N102C mutation also abolished the antagonistic actions of taurine, indicating that this site does not discriminate between the putative agonist- and antagonist-bound conformations of beta -amino acids. The effects of mutations from Lys104-Thr112 indicate that the mechanism by which this domain controls beta -amino acid-specific binding and gating processes differs substantially depending on whether the receptor is expressed in mammalian cells or Xenopus oocytes. Thr112 is the only domain element in mammalian cell-expressed GlyRs which was demonstrated to discriminate between glycine and taurine.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:60871

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Science

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Neurosciences #Agonist Affinity #Beta-amino Acid Agonist #Human Glycine Receptor Alpha 1 Subunit #Substituted Cysteine Accessibility Scan #Alpha-subunit #Spasmodic Mouse #Al Subunit #Mutation #Identification #Channel #Accessibility #Hyperekplexia #Localization #Pharmacology #C1 #320600 Medical Physiology #780105 Biological sciences
Tipo

Journal Article