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Biophys J, August 1998, p. 825-833, Vol. 75, No. 2
Neurological Sciences Institute, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97209 USA
In the visual and olfactory systems, cyclic
nucleotide-gated (CNG) ion channels convert stimulus-induced changes in
the internal concentrations of cGMP and cAMP into changes in membrane
potential. Although it is known that significant activation of these
channels requires the binding of three or more molecules of ligand, the detailed molecular mechanism remains obscure. We have probed the structural changes that occur during channel activation by using sulfhydryl-reactive methanethiosulfonate (MTS) reagents and
N-ethylmaleimide (NEM). When expressed in
Xenopus oocytes, the
-subunit of the bovine retinal
channel forms homomultimeric channels that are activated by cGMP with a
K1/2 of ~100 µM. Cyclic AMP, on the
other hand, is a very poor activator; a saturating concentration
elicits only 1% of the maximum current produced by cGMP. Treatment of excised patches with MTS-ethyltrimethylamine (MTSET) or NEM
dramatically potentiated the channel's response to both cyclic
nucleotides. After MTSET treatment, the dose-response relation for cGMP
was shifted by over two orders of magnitude to lower concentrations. The effect on channel activation by cAMP was even more striking. After
modification, the channels were fully activated by cAMP with a
K1/2 of ~60 µM. This potentiation was
abolished by conversion of Cys481 to a nonreactive alanine
residue. Potentiation occurred more rapidly in the presence of
saturating cGMP, indicating that this region of the channel is more
accessible when the channel is open. Cys481 is located in a
linker region between the transmembrane and cGMP-binding domains of the
channel. These results suggest that this region of the channel
undergoes significant movement during the activation process and is
critical for coupling ligand binding to pore opening. Potentiation,
however, is not mediated by the recently reported interaction between
the amino- and carboxy-terminal regions of the
-subunit. Deletion of
the entire amino-terminal domain had little effect on potentiation by
MTSET.
Biophys J, August 1998, p. 825-833, Vol. 75, No. 2
© 1998 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/98/08/825/09 $2.00
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