The triethylammonium QX-314 and the trimethylammonium QX-222 are lidocaine derivatives that act as open-channel blockers of the acetylcholine (ACh) receptor. When bound, these blockers should occlude some of the residues lining the channel. Eight residues in the second membrane-spanning segment (M2) of the mouse-muscle α subunit were mutated one at a time to cysteine and expressed together with wild-type β, γ, and δ subunits in Xenopus oocytes. The rate constant for the reaction of each substituted cysteine with 2-aminoethyl methanethiosulfonate (MTSEA) was determined from the time course of the irreversible effect of MTSEA on the ACh-induced current. The reactions were carried out in the presence and absence of ACh and in the presence and absence of QX-314 and QX-222. These blockers had no effect on the reactions in the absence of ACh. In the presence of ACh, both blockers retarded the reaction of extracellularly applied MTSEA with cysteine substituted for residues from αVal255, one third of the distance in from the extracellular end of M2, to αGlu241, flanking the intracellular end of M2, but not with cysteine substituted for αLeu258 or αGlu262, at the extracellular end of M2. The reactions of MTSEA with cysteines substituted for αLeu258 and αGlu262 were considerably faster in the presence of ACh than in its absence. That QX-314 and QX-222 did not protect αL258C and αE262C against reaction with MTSEA in the presence of ACh implies that protection of the other residues was due to occlusion of the channel and not to the promotion of a less reactive state from a remote site. Given the 12-Å overall length of the blockers and the α-helical conformation of M2 in the open state, the binding site for both blockers extends from αVal255 down to αSer248.
Delimiting the Binding Site for Quaternary Ammonium Lidocaine Derivatives in the Acetylcholine Receptor Channel
Address correspondence to Arthur Karlin, Center for Molecular Recognition, Columbia University, 630 West 168th Street, Box 7, New York, NY 10032. Fax: 212-305-5594; E-mail: [email protected]
This research was supported by research grants to A. Karlin from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (NS-07065), the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and the McKnight Endowment Fund for Neuroscience. During part of this work, J.M. Pascual was supported by NIH Neurological Sciences Academic Development Award NS01698. We thank Dr. Rune Sandberg of Astra for gifts of QX-222 and QX-314.
If MTSEA itself first bound reversibly at its site of reaction, and then reacted, the discrepancy between the IC50 for QX-314 and the QX-314 concentration that gave half-maximal retardation of the reaction of MTSEA could be explained by the competition of QX-314 and MTSEA for reversible binding in the channel. However, even at 10 mM MTSEA, the highest concentration tested, MTSEA had no effect on the ACh-induced current mediated by wild-type receptor. In addition, there was no rapidly reversible component of the inhibition by MTSEA of the ACh-induced current mediated by any of the mutants. Hence, MTSEA does not reversibly bind in the channel to an appreciable extent, and thus, before its covalent reaction in the channel, MTSEA is unlikely to compete with the binding of QX-314.
Juan M. Pascual, Arthur Karlin; Delimiting the Binding Site for Quaternary Ammonium Lidocaine Derivatives in the Acetylcholine Receptor Channel . J Gen Physiol 1 November 1998; 112 (5): 611–621. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.112.5.611
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