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Vol. 281, Issue 2, 905-913, 1997
4
Subunit in Bovine Adrenal Chromaffin Cells: Studies using
Bromoacetylcholine, Epibatidine, Cytisine and mAb351
Division of Pharmacology,
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Abstract |
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Relatively little is known about the type and number of nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) that mediate secretion from adrenal
chromaffin cells. In these studies, we investigated nAChR reserve pools
and their modulation using bromoacetylcholine (brACh) and the
anti-nAChR antibody mAb35. By using brACh under acetylating conditions,
adrenal catecholamine release was reduced (IC50, ~0.3
µM). This effect was slowly reversible. Submaximal concentrations of
brACh caused shifts to the right in concentration-response curves of
approximately 4-fold, as well as decreases in
Emax values for the agonists nicotine and
epibatidine. Cytisine is a nAChR agonist (EC50, ~46 µM)
that was somewhat less efficacious than nicotine
(Emax, ~85% of 10 µM nicotine) in
adrenal chromaffin cells. Submaximal concentrations of brACh caused a
small shift to the right in the concentration-response curves for the
agonist cytisine, as well as a decrease in the
Emax value. mAb35, which causes a slowly
developing loss of nAChR-mediated secretion, produced a time-dependent
shift to the right in agonist concentration-response curves and a
reduction in Emax for nicotine and
epibatidine. mAb35 treatment produced only a reduction in the
Emax value of cytisine. Finally, we cloned
and sequenced a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction product
from bovine adrenal chromaffin RNA that shares a high degree of
homology with
4 nAChR subunits. Northern analysis provided evidence
for the presence of this transcript in chromaffin cell cultures.
Together, these studies support the presence of a nAChR reserve in
adrenal chromaffin cells that is down-regulated by mAb35. These studies
also support the presence of more than one nAChR population mediating
secretion and the presence of
4 nAChR subunits.
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Introduction |
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nAChRs are found in a variety of
tissues, including the neuromuscular junction, central nervous system,
autonomic ganglia and adrenal medulla. This important class of
ligand-gated ion channels mediates several physiological functions,
such as synaptic transmission and modulation of neurotransmitter
release, and may be involved in the regulation of neuronal development
(for review, see Sargent, 1993
; Galzi and Changeux, 1995
). Neuronal
nAChRs, like muscle nAChRs, are composed of multiple subunits. To date, eight
(
2 to
9) and three
(
2 to
4) neuronal nAChR
subunits have been identified (Sargent, 1993
; Elgoyhen et
al., 1994
). The diversity of nAChR subunits allows for the
possibility of a daunting number of subtypes based upon subunit
composition. Numerous combinations of the known neuronal nAChR subunits
have been reported to form functional nAChRs in vitro
(Luetje and Patrick, 1991
; Gerzanich et al., 1994
; Elgoyhen
et al., 1994
); however, little information is available
regarding the in vivo subunit compositions of neuronal nAChRs. More importantly, though, contribution of multiple
subunits/subtypes to the regulation of cellular function has not been
established.
Oocyte expression studies have revealed that combinations of
2,
3
and
4 with either
2 or
4 subunits are required for the
formation of functional nAChRs (Boulter et al., 1987
; Luetje and Patrick, 1991
). In contrast, the
7,
8 and
9 subunits can form functional homomeric receptors (Gerzanich et al., 1994
;
Elgoyhen et al., 1994
). Furthermore, studies have shown that
subunit composition influences the channel characteristics and
pharmacology of nAChRs (for review, see McGehee and Role, 1995
). This
is demonstrated by the effects of the nAChR agonist cytisine and the
antagonist
-bgt. In the oocyte expression system, cytisine is a
potent agonist on nAChRs containing
4 subunits but has little effect
on nAChRs containing
2 subunits (Luetje and Patrick, 1991
; Papke and
Heinemann, 1993
).
-bgt has been shown to inhibit agonist-induced
currents generated in
7,
8 and
9 homomeric nAChRs but has no
effect on other neuronal nAChRs (Gerzanich et al., 1994
;
Elgoyhen et al., 1994
).
It is becoming increasingly evident that nAChR populations within a
given neuronal tissue may be heterogeneous. In chick ciliary ganglia at
least three populations of nAChRs have been immunologically identified.
These include a large population of
7-containing receptors that gate
Ca++ in response to nicotine and are inhibited by
-bgt
(Vijayaraghavan et al., 1992
; Zhang et al., 1994
;
Pugh and Berg, 1994
). These cells also contain a smaller population of
3
5
4 receptors that cross-react with the monoclonal antibody
mAb35 (Conroy et al., 1992
; Vernallis et al.,
1993
). Additionally, a small population of nAChRs that bind mAb35
contain the
2 subunit (Conroy and Berg, 1995
). Patch-clamp
techniques have also been used to identify multiple populations of
nAChRs within given tissues. In cultured hippocampal neurons, four
classes of nicotine-mediated currents (types IA, IB, II and III) can be
demonstrated, based on channel characteristics and pharmacological
profiles (Alkondon and Albuquerque, 1993
; Lukas, 1995
).
Activation of adrenal nAChRs leads to the release of a variety of
secretory products, including epinephrine. Despite their physiological
importance, very little information is available on these neuronal
nAChRs. Patch-clamp and binding studies have indicated that the number
of nAChRs on chromaffin cells is relatively low (Maconochie and Knight,
1992
; Lee et al., 1992
). Pharmacological studies support the
presence of multiple populations of adrenal nAChRs. One population
binds
-bgt and probably is not involved in secretion (Wilson and
Kirshner, 1977
; Afar et al., 1994
). Another population of
nAChRs, which interact with the nAChR antibody mAb35, is also present.
Our laboratory has demonstrated that adrenal chromaffin cells contain
mAb35 binding sites (Lopez and McKay, in press) and that mAb35 potently
and specifically reduces nAChR-stimulated catecholamine release (Gu
et al., 1996
). These effects of mAb35 develop slowly and are
slowly reversible, suggesting that mAb35 induces nAChR down-regulation.
The ability of mAb35 to modulate adrenal nAChRs has led to their
identification as mAb35-nAChRs (Gu et al., 1996
); a similar
classification has been used for nAChRs found on chick ciliary ganglion
neurons (Halvorsen and Berg, 1990
; Conroy et al., 1992
;
Vernallis et al., 1993
). The subunit composition of
mAb35-nAChRs and other nAChR subtypes possibly involved in adrenal
secretion is unknown. To date, only the
3 and
7 nAChR subunits
have been cloned and sequenced in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells
(Criado et al., 1992
; García-Guzmán et
al., 1995). Because
-bgt has no effect on nicotine-stimulated release in these cells, it is unlikely that the
7 subunit plays an
important role in secretory events. Furthermore,
3 subunits do not
form functional homomeric channels in oocytes (Luetje and Patrick,
1991
). Therefore, additional subunits are presumably present and
contributing to populations of nAChRs that are involved in secretion.
Although it is recognized that subunit composition influences the pharmacology of nAChRs, the presence of receptor reserves (spare receptors) may also alter the pharmacological profiles of nAChR populations. Little or no data are available on the presence of spare nAChRs in neuronal tissues, and relatively little is known about the type or number of nAChRs present on adrenal chromaffin cells. The following studies were designed to investigate the presence and composition of adrenal nAChR reserves. In theses studies, the irreversible inhibitor brACh was used to inactivate nAChRs and the concentration-response profiles of the nAChR agonists nicotine, epibatidine and cytisine were determined. The monoclonal antibody mAb35 was used to provide information on the relative magnitude of populations of nAChRs involved in secretion. Finally, RT-PCR was used to identify nAChR subunits expressed in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells.
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Materials and Methods |
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Materials.
(
)-Nicotine hydrogen tartrate, cytisine and
components of N2+ medium were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St.
Louis, MO). DMEM and DMEM/F-12 medium were obtained from Life
Technologies (Grand Island, NY). (±)-Epibatidine dihydrochloride and
brACh bromide were purchased from Research Biochemicals Inc. (Natick, MA). DL-[3H]NE (specific activity, 12.0-15.0
Ci/mmol) was purchased from DuPont-New England Nuclear Corp. (Boston,
MA).
Isolation and primary culture of bovine adrenal chromaffin
cells.
Adrenal chromaffin cells were dissociated from intact
glands and plated in supplemented DMEM, as previously described (Maurer and McKay, 1994
). Cells were plated at a density of 1 to 2 × 105 cells/well on 24-well culture plates for secretion
studies or 107 cells/100-mm dish for RNA studies. Two days
after plating, media were replaced with a modified serum-free N2+
medium previously described by our laboratory (Maurer and McKay, 1994
).
DMEM and N2+ media were supplemented with 250 ng/ml amphotericin B, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, 2 mM L-glutamine
and 10 µM 5-fluoro-2
-deoxyuridine. One day before experimentation, the culture medium was removed and replaced with medium free of amphotericin B and 5-fluoro-2
-deoxyuridine. Cells were used 4 to 7 days after isolation.
Catecholamine secretion studies.
A [3H]NE
assay was used to monitor catecholamine release from cultured cells
(McKay and Schneider, 1984
). Cells were incubated with 0.1 µM
[3H]NE in a PSS containing 140 mM NaCl, 4.4 mM KCl, 1.2 mM MgSO4, 3.6 mM NaHCO3, 1.2 mM
KH2PO4, 2 mM CaCl2, 10 mM glucose,
5 mM 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid (pH 7.2-7.4) and 0.5% bovine serum albumin and were extensively washed before all
treatments. The amount of radioactivity released after a 5-min incubation with secretagogue (stimulated release) or without
secretagogue (basal release) was determined using liquid scintillation
counting. The radioactivity remaining in the cells was then extracted
with 8% trichloroacetic acid and counted. The sum of the secreted and trichloroacetic acid-extractable radioactivity represented total incorporated [3H]NE. Results were expressed either as a
percentage of total incorporated [3H]NE released under
the treatment conditions (i.e., secreted
[3H]NE divided by total incorporated
[3H]NE × 100) or as a percentage of the net
stimulated control response (percentage of control) where basal
(nonstimulated) release was subtracted from all groups
(i.e., treatment group release minus basal release divided
by control nicotine-stimulated release minus basal release × 100).
mAb35 (anti-nAChR monoclonal antibody).
A hybridoma cell
line that secretes mAb35, a monoclonal antibody directed against the
main immunogenic region of nAChRs, was obtained from the American Type
Culture Collection (Rockville, MD). The cells were cultured and the
antibody was concentrated and purified using techniques described
previously (Gu et al., 1996
).
brACh treatment.
Adrenal nAChRs were irreversibly
inactivated by acetylation with brACh, using techniques modified from
the work of Gardette et al. (1991)
. The cells were first
treated with 1 mM dithiothreitol in PSS (pH 8) for 15 min at 37°C, to
reduce nAChR disulfide bonds. After washing (1 ml PSS/well, 5 min),
cells were treated with brACh for 6 min at room temperature and washed
for 5 min. Finally, the disulfide bonds were reoxidized by incubation
of the cells with 1 mM 5,5
-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) in PSS for
15 min at 37°C. After a 5-min wash, cells were used immediately for
acute studies or incubated in N2+ medium for chronic studies.
RT/PCR, cloning and sequencing.
Total RNA was isolated from
adrenal medulla using Trizol reagent (Life Technologies), according to
the procedure of Chomczynski and Sacchi (1987)
. Before use as a
template for RT, the RNA was treated with 1 U of DNase I (amplification
grade; Life Technologies). The RT reaction was performed in a 20-µl
volume containing 500 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphates, 10 mM
dithiothreitol, 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.4), 50 mM KCl, 2.5 mM
MgCl2, 200 U Superscript II (Life Technologies) and 100 ng
random hexamers. RNA and random primers were heat-denatured and reverse
transcribed for 10 min at 25°C and then for 50 min at 42°C,
followed by treatment with 2 U of RNase H (Life Technologies) at 37°C
for 20 min. Single-stranded cDNA was amplified by PCR in a MJ Research
thermocycler, in a final volume of 100 µl containing 1.5 mM
MgCl2, 50 mM KCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.4), 500 nM levels of
each primer, 500 µM deoxynucleoside triphosphates and 5 U of Taq
polymerase (Life Technologies) overlaid with mineral oil. The design of
degenerate PCR primers was based on homologous sequences of TM3 and TM4
of the bovine
3, rat
3, rat
2 and rat
4 subunit genes. The
TM3 primer sequence was 5
-GTMACCYTYTCCATYGTCA-3
, and the TM4 primer
sequence was 5
-CGRTCTAYSACCATSGCMAC-3
, where M is A or C, Y is C or
T, S is G or C and R is A or G. Amplification was performed as follows.
Samples were heated to 94°C for 5 min, after which the temperature
was lowered to 80°C. Taq polymerase was then added and the reaction
proceeded for 36 cycles (94°C for 1 min, 52°C for 1 min and 72°C
for 1.5 min), followed by incubation for 10 min at 72°C to complete
the extension. PCR products were cloned into the vector pCRII, using
the TA cloning kit (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA), and sequenced.
Sequencing was performed using the chain-termination method (Sanger
et al., 1977
), with Sequenase T7 polymerase (United States
Biochemical, Cleveland, OH). A basic local alignment search tool
(Altschul et al., 1990
) search of nonredundant GenBank and
EMBL sequences was used to identify similar sequences. Additional
analysis of sequences was performed using the GeneWorks 2.1 program
(IntelliGenetics, Mountain View, CA).
RNA analysis.
RNA was purified from cultured bovine adrenal
chromaffin cells using Trizol reagent (Life Technologies), according to
the procedure of Chomczynski and Sacchi (1987)
. Northern blot analysis was performed using 1% (w/v) agarose gels containing 7.4% (v/v) formaldehyde in 20 mM 3-(N-morpholino)propanesulfonic acid,
1 mM EDTA disodium, 5 mM sodium acetate, pH 7. After electrophoresis, the RNA was transferred to Gene Screen Plus membranes (DuPont-New England Nuclear) in 10× standard saline citrate (1× standard saline citrate contains 0.15 M sodium chloride and 0.015 M sodium citrate) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The EcoRI
inserts from the pCRII vector containing either bovine cDNA 4 or bovine
3 cDNA were 32P-labeled with [
-32P]dCTP
(3000 Ci/mmol; DuPont-New England Nuclear) by random priming (Feinberg
and Vogelstein, 1983
) and hybridized to Gene Screen Plus membranes in
5× SSPE (1× SSPE contains 0.15 M NaCl, 0.01 M
NaH2PO4 and 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.4), 50% deionized
formamide, 5× Denhardt's solution (1× Denhardt's solution contains
0.2 mg/ml polyvinylpyrrolidone, 0.2 mg/ml bovine serum albumin and 0.2 mg/ml Ficoll 400), 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 10% dextran sulfate,
100 µg/ml salmon sperm DNA, at 42°C. The filters were washed in 2× SSPE at room temperature, 2× SSPE/2% sodium dodecyl sulfate at 65°C
and 0.1× SSPE at room temperature. Autoradiograms were developed after
exposure to Kodak XAR-5 film at
70°C, with DuPont Cronex intensifying screens.
Calculations and statistics. Results were calculated from the number of observations performed in duplicate or triplicate. EC50 and Emax values were obtained by averaging values generated from sigmoid nonlinear regression analyses (Inplot 3.1; GraphPad, San Diego, CA) of individual concentration-response curves. At high agonist concentrations, a reduction in secretory response was often seen; these data were omitted during nonlinear curve fitting. Results are expressed as arithmetic means ± S.E., except for EC50 values, which are expressed as geometric means (with 95% confidence limits). Statistical analysis was performed using Dunnett's multiple-comparison procedure at a .05 level of significance.
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Results |
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Previous studies have documented the utility of brACh treatment in
the study of nAChRs (Leprince, 1983
; Listerud et al., 1991
; Gardette et al., 1991
). We found that brACh was effective as
an nAChR agonist (fig. 1A), with an EC50 of
approximately 4 µM. However, when brACh was used under acetylating
conditions (see "Materials and Methods"), an immediate loss of
nicotine-stimulated adrenal catecholamine release occurred. These
effects were concentration-dependent (IC50, ~0.3 µM).
At concentrations greater than 10 µM, brACh eliminated approximately
90% of control nAChR-stimulated release (fig. 1B). brACh had no effect
on 56 mM KCl-stimulated release under conditions that reduced
nicotine-stimulated release (data not shown). The reduction in
nAChR-stimulated release was not immediately reversible (fig.
2). nAChR-stimulated secretion returned slowly, with a
functional recovery rate of approximately 2%/hr (fig. 2). Recovery of
nAChR-stimulated function could be blocked by cycloheximide (1 µg/ml)
treatment (data not shown), suggesting that the return of functional
receptors involves protein synthesis and supporting the irreversible
nature of brACh treatment.
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Irreversible receptor antagonists are often used to investigate the
presence of spare receptors. These antagonists produce increases in
EC50 values and decreases in Emax
values, which are characteristics of systems containing receptor
reserves. In the next series of experiments, brACh was used to
irreversibly inactivate nAChRs and then the concentration-response
profiles for the nAChR agonists nicotine, epibatidine and cytisine were
determined. As seen in figures 3 and 4
and table 1, the EC50 values for nicotine, epibatidine and cytisine were approximately 4.0 µM, 8.5 nM and 41.0 µM, respectively. With increasing concentrations of brACh, shifts to
the right in the concentration-response curves of nicotine and
epibatidine occurred (fig. 3; table 1). At a concentration of 100 nM,
brACh caused a small increase in the EC50 value of nicotine; at 1 µM brACh, an increase in the EC50 value of
approximately 3.7-fold was seen (fig. 3; table 1). Similarly, 1 µM
brACh caused an increase in the EC50 value of epibatidine
of approximately 4.1-fold (fig. 3; table 1). At 10 µM brACh, there
was an additional increase in EC50 values for nicotine and
epibatidine; however, the values were not significantly different than
the EC50 values generated after 1 µM brACh treatment
(fig. 3; table 1). Additionally, curve fitting of the depressed values
was difficult and introduced considerable variability. Unlike the
observed shifts with nicotine and epibatidine, 1 µM brACh increased
the EC50 value of cytisine by approximately 2-fold (fig. 3;
table 1). Finally, 100 nM brACh had no significant effect on the
Emax values of the agonists. However, at 1 µM
brACh, the Emax values for nicotine, epibatidine and cytisine were reduced by 44, 35 and 38%, respectively
(fig. 3; table 1). Increasing the concentration of brACh to 10 µM
caused an additional reduction in the Emax value
for each agonist (fig. 3; table 1).
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The studies described above demonstrate that adrenal chromaffin cells
contain a receptor reserve among the population of nAChRs involved in
secretion. Previous studies from our laboratory indicate that more than
one subtype of nAChR is involved in secretory function, and they
suggest that mAb35-nAChRs are the principal receptors mediating
secretory responses (Gu et al., 1996
). The presence of
mAb35-nAChRs is supported by the ability of mAb35 treatment to cause
down-regulation of a population of adrenal nAChRs. The time course for
the effects of mAb35 suggest a gradual disappearance of surface
receptors (Gu et al., 1996
). If this occurs, then mAb35 treatment should produce shifts in agonist concentration-response curves with increasing treatment times, as the antibody eliminates receptor reserves. To investigate these possibilities, we used an
approach similar to the one described above for brACh. In these studies, the concentration-response relationships for nicotine, epibatidine and cytisine at various times after treatment with maximal
inhibitory concentrations (50 nM) of mAb35 (Gu et al., 1996
)
were determined. mAb35 treatment produced a time-dependent shift in the
agonist concentration-response curves for nicotine and epibatidine
(fig. 4; table 1). After 6 hr, the EC50 value for nicotine
was increased by approximately 2-fold (table 1). After 24 and 48 hr, no
additional increase in the EC50 value of nicotine was seen;
however, the Emax value was reduced by
approximately 26% after 24 hr and by approximately 31% after 48 hr
(fig. 4; table 1). As with nicotine, a 6-hr treatment with mAb35
increased the EC50 value of epibatidine by approximately
2-fold (fig. 4; table 1). After 24 and 48 hr, no additional increases
in the EC50 value for epibatidine were seen; however, the
Emax value was reduced by approximately 22%
after 24 hr and by 26% after 48 hr (fig. 4; table 1). mAb35
pretreatment had no significant effect on the EC50 value of
cytisine, even after 48 hr of treatment (fig. 4; table 1). However, in
as little as 6 hr, mAb35 pretreatment reduced the
Emax value for cytisine by approximately 56%
(fig. 4; table 1). After 24 and 48 hr, the Emax
value for cytisine was reduced by approximately 63 and 64%,
respectively (fig. 4; table 1). No additional reductions in
Emax values for the agonists were seen after 72 hr of mAb35 treatment (data not shown). These results with mAb35
paralleled those observed with brACh treatment, providing evidence that
mAb35 causes the down-regulation and loss of a population of nAChRs.
The subunit composition of mAb35-nAChRs in chromaffin cells is not
known. In the chick ciliary ganglion (autonomic parasympathetic neurons), mAb35-nAChRs are composed of
3,
5,
4 and sometimes
2 subunits (Conroy et al., 1992
; Vernallis et
al., 1993
; Conroy and Berg, 1995
). Chromaffin cell nAChRs may be
of similar composition. To complement studies of the pharmacology,
turnover and expression of nAChRs in chromaffin cells, there is a need
to clone and characterize additional nAChR subunits. We used knowledge
of subunit sequences from other species to design a strategy to clone
additional chromaffin nAChR subunits. Each nAChR subunit thus far
identified has four putative TM regions. The sequences of these regions
are conserved among nAChRs. The sequence between TM3 and TM4 forms an
intracellular loop region that varies in length and sequence among
nAChR subunits (for review, see Sargent, 1993
) and is much less
conserved than the TM regions. Oligonucleotide primers were designed to
amplify sequences related to nAChR regions between TM3 and TM4
(TM3-TM4) after RT of bovine adrenal RNA. Using RT-PCR, we amplified
bovine cDNA sequences with homology to nAChR sequences. When the bovine cDNAs were cloned and sequenced, two distinct classes of PCR products were identified. One was identical to a bovine
3 cDNA previously identified by Criado et al. (1992)
. Another cDNA was
sequenced and was distinct from the bovine
3 sequence. This
sequence, bovine cDNA 4, was used to search GenBank and EMBL databases
for similar sequences. The sequences with the greatest similarity to
bovine cDNA 4 were from the TM3-TM4 regions of nAChR genes. The GenBank search produced sequences with the highest homology to human and rat
4 subunits (fig. 5). The bovine cDNA 4 clone was also
aligned pairwise with TM3-TM4 regions of human
4, rat
4 and rat
2 nAChR subunits. The bovine cDNA 4 sequence was identical to 81%
of human
4 and 76% of rat
4 but only 56% of rat
2 TM3-TM4
nucleotide sequences. The bovine cDNA 4 was used to probe a Northern
blot containing cultured bovine adrenal chromaffin RNA. One major and one minor band of about 3 kilobases were observed (fig.
6). This pattern was distinct from that observed using
bovine
3 (fig. 6) or rat
3 (Gu et al., 1996
) cDNAs as
probes.
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Discussion |
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In these studies, we have used the cholinergic agent brACh as a
tool to investigate adrenal nAChR populations. We have shown that,
under acetylating conditions, brACh reduces nicotine-stimulated catecholamine secretion in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. This effect
is receptor-specific (i.e., acetylation with brACh has no
effects on catecholamine release induced by depolarizing concentrations of KCl). We have also found that the effects of brACh are slowly reversible, with full recovery of nAChR-mediated secretory function occurring within 24 to 48 hr. In the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, recovery of nAChR-mediated secretory function
does not occur. These characteristics are consistent with the actions
of brACh in a variety of muscle and neuronal nAChR preparations in
which brACh covalently binds to nAChR
subunits, producing
irreversible nAChR inactivation (Moore and Raftery, 1979
; Kao and
Karlin, 1986
).
In these studies, we have documented the presence of a nAChR reserve
(i.e., spare receptors) using brACh to irreversibly
inactivate adrenal nAChRs. According to spare receptor theory, as an
irreversible antagonist eliminates a receptor reserve, the
concentration-response curve of a full agonist shifts to the right.
This produces an apparent increase in the EC50 value for
the agonist. When the irreversible antagonist has totally eliminated
the receptor reserve, further elimination of functional receptors
decreases the Emax value for the agonist (for
review, see Ruffolo, 1982
). In our studies, as nAChRs are inactivated
with increasing concentrations of brACh, there are progressive
increases in EC50 values, followed by progressive decreases
in Emax values for nicotine and epibatidine. These characteristics support the presence of a population of spare
nAChRs. The magnitude of our nAChR reserve is difficult to estimate
accurately because knowledge of Kd values is
required. Theoretically, fractional receptor occupancy equals the
concentration of the ligand divided by the sum of the
Kd of the ligand plus the concentration of the
ligand. However, Kd values obtained from nAChR
binding studies may not be an accurate reflection of the relationship
between nAChR affinity and functional responses. Contrary to the
expected results, the Kd value of nicotine
(nanomolar) is several orders of magnitude lower than the
EC50 value of nicotine (micromolar) for a variety of
functional responses (Lee et al., 1992
) (table 1). These
lower Kd values are believed to represent binding to desensitized, higher affinity states of nAChRs (Sine and
Taylor, 1979
). Kd values can be calculated from
functional data using Furchgott analysis (Furchgott, 1966
). However,
this type of analysis is difficult to perform, because of the
relatively small changes in EC50 values in our studies. For
our determination of receptor occupancy, we have extrapolated apparent
Kd values. Theoretically, when the receptor
reserve has been eliminated, the Emax value
should begin to decrease and the EC50 value should no
longer increase; at this point, the EC50 value should equal the Kd. From table 1, we have estimated the
Kd values of nicotine and epibatidine to be 13 µM and 35 nM, respectively. Using these Kd
values in the receptor occupancy equation stated above, receptor occupancy at maximum functional response for nicotine (10 µM) and
epibatidine (30 nM) is 43 and 46%, respectively. Accordingly, when
considering nAChRs involved in secretion, bovine adrenal chromaffin
cells possess >2 times the number of nAChRs than are required for
maximum secretory responses.
To further investigate adrenal nAChR populations involved in secretory
function, we have used the nAChR antibody mAb35. Compared with brACh
treatment, mAb35 causes a more slowly developing and less complete
down-regulation of nAChR-mediated secretory function (Gu et
al., 1996
). We show in these studies that the mAb35-induced loss
of nAChR-mediated secretory function is characterized by a shift in the
concentration-response curve to the right, as well as a decrease in
Emax. The time course of this effect is
consistent with a scenario where the antibody slowly down-regulates
nAChRs (i.e., removes the receptor from the cell surface).
The resulting loss of receptors can be seen as a shift in
EC50 followed by a reduction in Emax
as the receptor reserve is eliminated. Furthermore, the maximum
attainable reduction in Emax with mAb35 in our
studies is 30%. Because full secretory responses are reached with only 45% receptor occupancy, this seemingly minor mAb35-induced reduction in Emax likely represents a >55% reduction in
the total population of adrenal nAChRs involved in secretion. Although
these calculations assume that nAChR populations are functionally
similar, these studies provide further evidence that nAChR reserves
exist and that mAb35-nAChRs are the principal receptors mediating
adrenal catecholamine release.
In these studies, we have also used the nAChR agonist cytisine to study
adrenal nAChR populations involved in secretion. Cytisine has been
shown to have activity on
4-containing nAChRs and little or no
activity on
2-containing nAChRs (Luetje and Patrick, 1991
; Papke and
Heinemann, 1993
). We have shown that cytisine stimulates adrenal
catecholamine release (EC50, ~41 µM); however, cytisine is somewhat less efficacious than either nicotine or epibatidine (80-90% of the response attainable with either nicotine or
epibatidine). Our data are consistent with cytisine acting as a partial
agonist on adrenal nAChRs. In support of this, reductions in nAChR
pools by either brACh or mAb35 produce progressive reductions in the Emax values of cytisine and have little effect
on the EC50 values of cytisine. These are characteristics
associated with partial agonism. mAb35 treatment alters the
concentration-response effects of cytisine to a much greater extent
than that seen with nicotine and epibatidine. These findings are also
consistent with the actions of cytisine as a partial agonist. However,
we cannot rule out the possibility that cytisine may be acting as a
full agonist on a subpopulation of nAChRs, the majority of which
coincide with mAb35-nAChRs. Our data are unable to distinguish between
these two possibilities.
As described above, cytisine, a nAChR agonist in bovine adrenal
chromaffin cells, has been shown to have activity on
4-containing nAChRs (Luetje and Patrick, 1991
). This suggests that
4 nAChR subunits may be present in these cells. In these studies, we present evidence that a
4 subunit is expressed in bovine adrenal chromaffin cells. Bovine cDNA 4 likely represents a segment of the bovine
4
nAChR subunit corresponding to the large cytoplasmic loop between TM3
and TM4. This clone has the highest degree of sequence similarity with
analogous regions of
4 nAChR subunits from humans (81%) and rats
(76%). Bovine cDNA 4 has a lesser degree of sequence similarity with
the analogous region of rat
2 (56%), which is comparable to the
degree of sequence identity between analogous regions of rat
4 and
rat
2 nAChR subunits (54%). It is not surprising that
4
transcripts might be present in adrenal chromaffin cells, because
4
subunits are found in several tissues of similar embryonic origins. In
chick ciliary ganglia, the
4 subunit is associated with a
synaptic-type nAChR that also contains the
3,
5 and sometimes
2 subunits (Conroy et al., 1992
; Vernallis et
al., 1993
; Conroy and Berg, 1995
). In the rat PC12 cell line,
3,
5,
2 and
4 transcripts have been found (Boulter et
al., 1990
). Rat superior cervical ganglia also express the
4
subunit and contain nAChRs that can be activated by cytisine with an
EC50 of approximately 20 µM (Mandelzys et al.,
1995
), which is similar to the EC50 for cytisine in our
studies. Although comparing pharmacological/sequence data across
species can be problematic, our studies suggest that bovine adrenal
chromaffin cells contain a
4 subunit in nAChRs involved in
secretion.
These studies demonstrate that a receptor reserve exists for
nAChR-mediated adrenal catecholamine secretion. This finding represents
the first time receptor reserves for nAChRs involved in secretion have
been documented on neuronal tissues, and it has important functional
and pharmacological implications. Spare receptors influence
concentration-response relationships for agonists and antagonists (Zhu,
1993
). Because of the presence of spare receptors, reductions in nAChRs
may lead to alterations in the pharmacological profile of remaining
nAChRs. In these studies, we also provide supporting evidence that the
total population of nAChRs regulating secretory function may be
heterogeneous, with mAb35-nAChRs representing no less than 55% of the
total nAChR population involved in secretion. This observation may also
have important functional and pharmacological implications. Finally, the presence of cytisine sensitivity and our observation of a
4-related subunit transcript in adrenal chromaffin cells support the
presence of the
4 subunit in adrenal nAChRs involved in secretion.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We are grateful for the expert technical assistance provided by Susan B. McKay and Andrew C. Bidinotto. We also thank Drs. Popat N. Patil and Norman J. Uretsky for their helpful comments on the manuscript.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication January 6, 1997.
Received for publication September 17, 1996.
1 This work was supported by grants from the Bremer Foundation (Columbus, OH) and the American Heart Association (Ohio Affiliate) and by Grant NS29746 (R.T.B.) from the National Institutes of Health. Support from the Student Achievement in Research and Scholarship Program of the Ohio State University is also appreciated.
Send reprint requests to: Dennis B. McKay, Ph.D., Division of Pharmacology, The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy, 500 West 12th Ave., Columbus, OH 43210.
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
-bgt,
-bungarotoxin;
brACh, bromoacetylcholine;
DMEM, Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium;
nAChR, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor;
NE, norepinephrine;
PCR, polymerase
chain reaction;
PSS, physiological saline solution;
RT, reverse
transcription;
SSPE, standard saline/phosphate/EDTA;
TM, transmembrane
domain.
| |
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