Modulation of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor conformational state by free fatty acids and steroids.

Autor: Fernández Nievas GA; Instituto de Investigaciones Bioquímicas de Bahía Blanca, Universidad Nacional del Sur-Conicet, and UNESCO Chair of Biophysics and Molecular Neurobiology, Argentina., Barrantes FJ, Antollini SS
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The Journal of biological chemistry [J Biol Chem] 2008 Aug 01; Vol. 283 (31), pp. 21478-86. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 May 29.
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M800345200
Abstrakt: Steroids and free fatty acids (FFA) are noncompetitive antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). Their site of action is purportedly located at the lipid-AChR interface, but their exact mechanism of action is still unknown. Here we studied the effect of structurally different FFA and steroids on the conformational equilibrium of the AChR in Torpedo californica receptor-rich membranes. We took advantage of the higher affinity of the fluorescent AChR open channel blocker, crystal violet, for the desensitized state than for the resting state. Increasing concentrations of steroids and FFA decreased the K(D) of crystal violet in the absence of agonist; however, only cis-unsaturated FFA caused an increase in K(D) in the presence of agonist. This latter effect was also observed with treatments that caused the opposite effects on membrane polarity, such as phospholipase A(2) treatment or temperature increase (decreasing or increasing membrane polarity, respectively). Quenching by spin-labeled fatty acids of pyrene-labeled AChR reconstituted into model membranes, with the label located at the gammaM4 transmembrane segment, disclosed the occurrence of conformational changes induced by steroids and cis-unsaturated FFA. The present work is a step forward in understanding the mechanism of action of this type of molecules, suggesting that the direct contact between exogenous lipids and the AChR transmembrane segments removes the AChR from its resting state and that membrane polarity modulates the AChR activation equilibrium by an independent mechanism.
Databáze: MEDLINE