Voltage-jump relaxation kinetics for wild-type and chimeric beta subunits of neuronal nicotinic receptors.
Open Access
- 1 March 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 107 (3) , 369-379
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.107.3.369
Abstract
We have studied the voltage-jump relaxation currents for a series of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors resulting from the coexpression of wild-type and chimeric beta 4/beta 2 subunits with alpha 3 subunits in Xenopus oocytes. With acetylcholine as the agonist, the wild-type alpha 3 beta 4 receptors displayed five- to eightfold slower voltage-jump relaxations than did the wild-type alpha 3 beta 2 receptors. In both cases, the relaxations could best be described by two exponential components of approximately equal amplitudes over a wide range of [ACh]'s. Relaxation rate constants increased with [ACh] and saturated at 20- to 30-fold lower concentrations for the alpha 3 beta 2 receptor than for the alpha 3 beta 4 receptor, as observed previously for the peak steady state conductance. Furthermore, the chimeric beta 4/beta 2 subunits showed a transition in the concentration dependence of the rate constants in the region between residues 94 and 109, analogous to our previous observation with steady state conductances. However, our experiments with a series of beta-subunit chimeras did not localize residues that govern the absolute value of the kinetic parameters. Hill coefficients for the relaxations also differed from those previously measured for steady state responses. The data reinforce previous conclusions that the region between residues 94 and 109 on the beta subunit plays a role in binding agonist but also show that other regions of the receptor control gating kinetics subsequent to the binding step.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Channel gating governed symmetrically by conserved leucine residues in the M2 domain of nicotinic receptorsNature, 1995
- Regions of beta 2 and beta 4 responsible for differences between the steady state dose-response relationships of the alpha 3 beta 2 and alpha 3 beta 4 neuronal nicotinic receptors.The Journal of general physiology, 1995
- The amino terminal half of the nicotinic β-subunit extracellular domain regulates the kinetics of inhibition by neuronal bungarotoxinProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1993
- The Permeation Pathway of Neurotransmitter-Gated Ion ChannelsAnnual Review of Biophysics, 1992
- Potentiation of nicotinic receptor response by external calcium in rat central neuronsNeuron, 1992
- Neurotoxins Distinguish Between Different Neuronal Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Subunit CombinationsJournal of Neurochemistry, 1990
- An open-channel blocker interacts with adjacent turns of α-helices in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptorNeuron, 1990
- Single-channel currents of rat neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors expressed in xenopus oocytesNeuron, 1989
- Acetylcholine receptor kineticsThe Journal of Membrane Biology, 1981
- On the stochastic properties of single ion channelsProceedings of the Royal Society of London. B. Biological Sciences, 1981