Sites of Excitatory and Inhibitory Actions of Alcohols on Neuronal α2β4 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors

  1. Cecilia M. Borghese,
  2. L. Ashley Henderson,
  3. Virginia Bleck,
  4. James R. Trudell and
  5. R. Adron Harris
  1. Waggoner Center for Alcohol and Addiction Research, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas (C.M.B., L.A.H., V.B., R.A.H.); and Department of Anesthesia and Beckman Program for Molecular and Genetic Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California (J.R.T.)
  1. Address correspondence to:
    R. Adron Harris, University of Texas at Austin, Waggoner Center for Alcohol and Addiction Research, 1 University Station A4800, Austin, TX 78712-0159. E-mail: harris{at}mail.utexas.edu

Abstract

To define potential alcohol binding sites in the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) we used cysteine mutagenesis and sulfhydryl-specific labeling. The basis of this strategy is that covalent addition of an alkylthiol group to a cysteine in an alcohol binding site will mimic the action of an irreversibly bound alcohol. Each amino acid in the extracellular region of the second transmembrane segment of the nAChR subunit α2 was mutated to cysteine. The resulting α2 subunits were coexpressed with wild-type β4in Xenopus laevis oocytes, and the responses were studied using two-electrode voltage clamp. Of the 11 mutants tested, 2 fulfilled criteria for participation in an alcohol binding site: α2(L262C)β4 and α2(L263C)β4. Covalent binding of propanethiol to these cysteines did not change acetylcholine (ACh) affinity, but modified ACh maximal response in both cases: it increased for α2(L263C)β4 and decreased for α2(L262C)β4. The same modifications on ACh responses were obtained with ethanol on α2(L263C)β4 and octanol on α2(L262C)β4. This suggested that alcohol binding at L263 enhances receptor function, whereas binding at L262 inhibits function. We studied different n-alcohols (ethanol, butanol, pentanol, and octanol), as well as isoflurane and urethane, on these two mutants. Covalent binding of propanethiol to the cysteines revealed changes in the alcohol modulation consistent with an excitatory site (L263) or an inhibitory site (L262) being no longer accessible to alcohol. Thus, n-alcohols appear to act on both sites and their ability to enhance (short-chain), inhibit (long-chain), or produce no effect (intermediate-chain) depends upon their relative action at these two sites.

Footnotes

  • This study was supported by National Institutes of Health (NIH) Grants AA06399 and GM47818, the Texas Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse, and the Waggoner Center for Alcohol and Addiction Research (R.A.H.) and NIH Grant AA012278 (J.R.T.).

  • Part of this work was presented at the 25th Scientific Meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism, June 28–July 3, 2002, San Francisco, CA; and the 26th Scientific Meeting of the Research Society on Alcoholism, June 21–25, 2003, Fort Lauderdale, FL.

  • DOI: 10.1124/jpet.102.053710.

  • ABBREVIATIONS: nAChR, nicotinic acetylcholine receptor; GABAAR, γ-aminobutyric acid receptor type A; GlyR, glycine receptor; TM, transmembrane; PMTS, propyl methanethiosulfonate; ACh, acetylcholine; CRC, concentration-response curve; EC50, effective concentration for half-maximal response.

    • Received April 30, 2003.
    • Accepted July 1, 2003.
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