info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Topography of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor membrane-embedded domains
Fecha
2000-12Registro en:
Barrantes, Francisco Jose; Antollini, Silvia Susana; Blanton, Michael P.; Prieto, Manuel; Topography of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor membrane-embedded domains; American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; Journal of Biological Chemistry (online); 275; 48; 12-2000; 37333-37339
0021-9258
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Barrantes, Francisco Jose
Antollini, Silvia Susana
Blanton, Michael P.
Prieto, Manuel
Resumen
The topography of nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) membrane-embedded domains and the relative affinity of lipids for these protein regions were studied using fluorescence methods. Intact Torpedo californica AChR protein and transmembrane peptides were derivatized with N-(1-pyrenyl)maleimide (PM), purified, and reconstituted into asolectin liposomes. Fluorescence mapped to proteolytic fragments consistent with PM labeling of cysteine residues in αM1, αM4, γM1, and γM4. The topography of the pyrene-labeled Cys residues with respect to the membrane and the apparent affinity for representative lipids were determined by differential fluorescence quenching with spin-labeled derivatives of fatty acids, phosphatidylcholine, and the steroids cholestane and androstane. Different spin label lipid analogs exhibit different selectivity for the whole AChR protein and its transmembrane domains. In all cases labeled residues were found to lie in a shallow position. For M4 segments, this is compatible with a linear α-helical structure, but not so for M1, for which 'classical' models locate Cys residues at the center of the hydrophobic stretch. The transmembrane topography of M1 can be rationalized on the basis of the presence of a substantial amount of non-helical structure, and/or of kinks attributable to the occurrence of the evolutionarily conserved proline residues. The latter is a striking feature of M1 in the AChR and all members of the rapid ligand-gated ion channel superfamily.