Advanced Search
8

Identification of binding sites in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor for TDBzl-etomidate, a photoreactive positive allosteric effector.

Nirthanan S, Garcia G, Chiara DC, Husain SS, Cohen JB

J Biol Chem. 2008 Aug 8; 283(32):22051-62

8 Must Read

Stuart Forman, Massachusetts General Hospital, MA, USA. F1000 Anesthesiology & Pain Management

16 Jun 2008 | New Finding

This article identifies a novel class of molecules and a likely site for positive allosteric modulators of nicotinic acetylcholine (ACh) channels, which are potentially important therapies for myopathies and neurodegenerative diseases.

The authors studied TDBZl-etomidate, a derivative of the general anesthetic etomidate, and a positive modulator of nicotinic ACh receptors (nAChRs). By photolabeling nAChRs, they identified a new site formed within the intramembranous interface between the gamma and alpha subunits, which likely mediates positive allosterism.

The results suggest that intra-transmembrane domain sites are common among ligand-gated ion channels, and etomidate-like molecules may be developed as positive allosteric modulators.

Competing interests: S.F. has collaborated with the some of the authors, Drs Husain and Cohen, on other work. He has not contributed to this study in any way.

Forman S: "This article identifies a novel class of molecules and a likely site for positive allosteric..." Evaluation of: [Nirthanan S et al. Identification of binding sites in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor for TDBzl-etomidate, a photoreactive positive allosteric effector. J Biol Chem. 2008 Aug 8; 283(32):22051-62; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M801332200]. Faculty of 1000, 16 Jun 2008. F1000.com/1111130#eval567110

Short form
Forman S: 2008. F1000.com/1111130#eval567110

Faculty of 1000 evaluations, dissents and comments for [Nirthanan S et al. Identification of binding sites in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor for TDBzl-etomidate, a photoreactive positive allosteric effector. J Biol Chem. 2008 Aug 8; 283(32):22051-62; doi: 10.1074/jbc.M801332200]. Faculty of 1000, 16 Jun 2008. F1000.com/1111130

Short form
Faculty of 1000: 2008. F1000.com/1111130

Only signed-in users with full subscription access can make comments.
Sign in/get access to leave a comment.

No comments yet.

Etomidate, one of the most potent general anesthetics used clinically, acts at micromolar concentrations as an anesthetic and positive allosteric modulator of gamma-aminobutyric acid responses, whereas it inhibits muscle-type nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) at concentrations above 10 microm. We report here that TDBzl-etomidate, a photoreactive etomidate analog, acts as a positive allosteric nAChR modulator rather than an inhibitor, and we identify its binding sites by photoaffinity labeling. TDBzl-etomidate (>10 microm) increased the submaximal response to acetylcholine (10 microm) with a 2.5-fold increase at 60 microm. At higher concentrations, it inhibited the binding of the noncompetitive antagonists [(3)H]tetracaine and [(3)H]phencyclidine to Torpedo nAChR-rich membranes (IC(50) values of 0. 8 mm). nAChR-rich membranes were photolabeled with [(3)H]TDBzl-etomidate, and labeled amino acids were identified by Edman degradation. For nAChRs photolabeled in the absence of agonist (resting state), there was tetracaine-inhibitable photolabeling of amino acids in the ion channel at positions M2-9 (deltaLeu-265) and M2-13 (alphaVal-255 and deltaVal-269), whereas labeling of alphaM2-10 (alphaSer-252) was not inhibited by tetracaine but was enhanced 10-fold by proadifen or phencyclidine. In addition, there was labeling in gammaM3 (gammaMet-299), a residue that contributes to the same pocket in the nAChR structure as alphaM2-10. The pharmacological specificity of labeling of residues, together with their locations in the nAChR structure, indicate that TDBzl-etomidate binds at two distinct sites: one within the lumen of the ion channel (labeling of M2-9 and -13), an inhibitory site, and another at the interface between the alpha and gamma subunits (labeling of alphaM2-10 and gammaMet-299) likely to be a site for positive allosteric modulation.

DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M801332200

PMID: 18524766

Export