Title : Linear free-energy relationships and the dynamics of gating in the acetylcholine receptor channel - Grosman_2002_J.Biol.Phys_28_267 |
Author(s) : Grosman C |
Ref : J Biol Phys , 28 :267 , 2002 |
Abstract :
The muscle acetylcholine receptor channel (AChR) is a large (M(r) congruent with290K) transmembrane protein that mediates synaptic transmission. Theactivation of this ion channel can be understood in the framework of athermodynamic cycle with spontaneous gating (i.e., the closed right harpoon over left harpoon open reaction) and ligand-binding events as the elementary steps. Becauseagonists bind more tightly to the open than to the closed state, gating ofliganded receptors is more favorable than that of unliganded receptors.Accordingly, channel opening must involve two major conformationalchanges: the ACh-binding sites switch from a low-affinity to a high-affinityform, and the pore (located approximately 45 A away from the binding sites)switches from an ion-impermeable to an ion-permeable conformation. Togain insight into the reaction mechanism of fully-liganded gating, wecharacterized the corresponding transition state in the context of the `linearfree-energy relationships' of physical organic chemistry (Phi-valueanalysis). Gating of fully-liganded AChRs was studied by recordingsingle-channel currents using the patch-clamp technique. Perturbations tothe wild-type receptor were either series of different mutations at individualpositions or series of different agonists. Based on the obtained `snapshot'of the gating reaction at the transition state, and aware of the lack ofinformation about the rest of the energy profile, the most parsimoniousmechanism seems to be one where opening proceeds asynchronously, withthe low-to-high affinity change at the binding sites preceding the completeopening of the distant pore. |
PubMedSearch : Grosman_2002_J.Biol.Phys_28_267 |
PubMedID: 23345774 |
Grosman C (2002)
Linear free-energy relationships and the dynamics of gating in the acetylcholine receptor channel
J Biol Phys
28 :267
Grosman C (2002)
J Biol Phys
28 :267