Abstract

A modified invertebrate glutamate-gated Cl(-) channel (GluCl αβ) was previously employed to allow pharmacologically induced silencing of electrical activity in CNS neurons upon exposure to the anthelmintic drug ivermectin (IVM). Usefulness of the previous receptor was limited by 1) the high concentration of IVM necessary to elicit a consistent silencing phenotype, raising concern about potential side effects, and 2) the variable extent of neuronal spike suppression, due to variations in the co-expression levels of the fluorescent protein-tagged α and β subunits. To address these issues, mutant receptors generated via rational protein engineering strategies were examined for improvement. Introduction of a gain-of-function mutation (L9'F) in the second transmembrane domain of the α subunit appears to facilitate β subunit incorporation and substantially increase heteromeric GluCl αβ sensitivity to IVM. Removal of an arginine-based endoplasmic reticulum retention motif (RSR mutated to AAA) from the intracellular loop of the β subunit further promotes heteromeric expression at the plasma membrane possibly by preventing endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation of the β subunit rather than simply reducing endoplasmic reticulum retention. A monomeric XFP (mXFP) mutation that prevents fluorescent protein dimerization complements the mutant channel effects. Expression of the newly engineered GluCl opt α-mXFP L9'F + opt β-mXFP Y182F RSR_AAA receptor in dissociated neuronal cultures markedly increases conductance and reduces variability in spike suppression at 1 nm IVM. This receptor, named "GluClv2.0," is an improved tool for IVM-induced silencing.

Highlights

  • Ivermectin (IVM) silences activity in neurons expressing glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCl)

  • A number of studies on both cationselective and anion-selective (GABA and glycine) Cys-loop receptors have demonstrated that mutation of a highly conserved pore-lining residue, leucine 9Ј, to one of several other amino acids can dramatically increase agonist sensitivity through effects on channel gating [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]

  • This gain-of-function effect is evident in the dose-response relation, in which channel activation occurs with lower concentrations of agonist

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Summary

Background

Ivermectin (IVM) silences activity in neurons expressing glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCl). Usefulness of the previous receptor was limited by 1) the high concentration of IVM necessary to elicit a consistent silencing phenotype, raising concern about potential side effects, and 2) the variable extent of neuronal spike suppression, due to variations in the co-expression levels of the fluorescent protein-tagged ␣ and ␤ subunits. To address these issues, mutant receptors generated via rational protein engineering strategies were examined for improvement. In vitro silencing experiments unequivocally show that the resulting mutant receptor is a more sensitive and less variable GluCl/IVM silencing tool

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