Abstract
The glycine receptor (GlyR) exists either in homomeric α or heteromeric αβ forms. Its agonists bind at extracellular subunit interfaces. Unlike subunit interfaces from the homomeric α GlyR, subunit interfaces from the heteromeric αβ GlyR have not been characterized unambiguously because of the existence of multiple types of interface within single receptors. Here, we report that, by reconstituting β+/α- interfaces in a homomeric GlyR (αChb+a- GlyR), we were able to functionally characterize the αβ GlyR β+/α- interfaces. We found that the β+/α- interface had a higher agonist sensitivity than that of the α+/α- interface. This high sensitivity was contributed primarily by loop A. We also found that the β+/α- interface differentially modulates the agonist properties of glycine and taurine. Using voltage clamp fluorometry, we found that the conformational changes induced by glycine binding to the β+/α- interface were different from those induced by glycine binding to the α+/α- interface in the α GlyR. Moreover, the distinct conformational changes found at the β+/α- interface in the αChb+a- GlyR were also found in the heteromeric αβ GlyR, which suggests that the αChb+a- GlyR reconstitutes structural components and recapitulates functional properties, of the β+/α- interface in the heteromeric αβ GlyR. Our investigation not only provides structural and functional information about the GlyR β+/α- interface, which could direct GlyR β+/α- interface-specific drug design, but also provides a general methodology for unambiguously characterizing properties of specific protein interfaces from heteromeric proteins.
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