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Research Article

Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors have Ligand-Specific Attachment Point Patterns

, , , , &
Pages 425-435 | Published online: 26 Sep 2008
 

Abstract

Employing a panel of synthetic peptides as representative structural elements of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor from Torpedo electric organ, we recently identified three sequence regions of the receptor (α55–74, α134–153 and α181–200) serving as subsites for the binding of high molecular weight antagonists of acetylcholine (Conti-Tronconi et al. 1990). The relative binding affinities to these subsites of α-bungarotoxin and three competitive antibodies varied in a ligand-specific fashion. Employing a set of homologous synthetic peptides differing from α181–200 by the exchange of single amino acid residues along the sequence, we now find that ligand binding crucially depends on the presence of particular amino acids within the subsite while others influence binding only marginally if at all. The existence of ligand-specific attachment points may account for the wide range in binding and kinetic parameters, pharmacological specificity and distinct mean open times of the receptor-integral cation channel observed for cholinergic ligands.

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