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Vol. 302, Issue 2, 560-567, August 2002
Department of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, University of
Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida
Mercuric chloride exerted a biphasic modulatory effect on rat neuronal
nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) expressed in Xenopus
laevis oocytes as heteromers of the
3 or
4 and
2 or
4 subunits. The degree of modulation was subunit-dependent, with
4-containing receptors displaying greater potentiation and
4-containing receptors displaying greater inhibition. Thus,
4
4 receptors displayed both robust potentiation and robust inhibition. During prolonged coapplication of HgCl2, first potentiation
then inhibition of the acetylcholine (ACh) response was observed. Upon coapplication of 1 µM HgCl2, a 2-fold increase in
ACh-induced current was achieved in 55 ± 1 s. With continued
HgCl2 application, the ACh response was slowly inhibited
until, after 5 min, less than 10% of the initial response remained. By
measuring potentiation at its peak and inhibition 5 min after the start
of HgCl2 coapplication, we obtained EC50 and
IC50 values of 262 ± 75 and 430 ± 72 nM, respectively. HgCl2 potentiation was voltage-dependent,
increasing at more positive holding potentials. Upon washout of mercury
chloride, potentiation reversed with a t1/2
of 4.6 min. Inhibition reversed more slowly, with less than half the
initial response recovered after 15 min of wash. Although free cysteine
residues are common targets for mercury, elimination of all free
cysteines located in the extracellular domains of the
4 and
4
subunits did not alter the effects of mercuric chloride. Potentiation
and inhibition of neuronal nAChRs may occur through action at a
transmembrane or cytoplasmic location after passive diffusion of
mercuric chloride across the plasma membrane.