Abstract

GABA(A) receptors mediate fast inhibitory synaptic transmission. The transmembrane ion channel is lined by a ring of five α helices, M2 segments, one from each subunit. An outer ring of helices comprising the alternating M1, M3, and M4 segments from each subunit surrounds the inner ring and forms the interface with the lipid bilayer. The structural rearrangements that follow agonist binding and culminate in opening of the ion pore remain incompletely characterized. Propofol and other intravenous general anesthetics bind at the βM3-αM1 subunit interface. We sought to determine whether this region undergoes conformational changes during GABA activation. We measured the reaction rate of p-chloromercuribenzenesulfonate (pCMBS) with cysteines substituted in the GABA(A) receptor α1M1 and β2M3 segments. In the presence of GABA, the pCMBS reaction rate increased significantly in a cluster of residues in the extracellular third of the α1M1 segment facing the β2M3 segment. Mutation of the β2M2 segment 19' position, R269Q, altered the pCMBS reaction rate with several α1M1 Cys, some only in the resting state and others only in the GABA-activated state. Thus, β2R269 is charged in both states. GABA activation induced disulfide bond formation between β2R269C and α1I228C. The experiments demonstrate that α1M1 moves in relationship to β2M2R269 during gating. Thus, channel gating does not involve rigid body movements of the entire transmembrane domain. Channel gating causes changes in the relative position of transmembrane segments both within a single subunit and relative to the neighboring subunits.

Highlights

  • GABAA receptor transmembrane domain undergoes conformational changes during channel gating

  • Intravenous general anesthetics are thought to bind in the extracellular half of transmembrane domain subunit interface between the ␤M3 and ␣M1 segments, the same interface where GABA binds in the extracellular

  • To probe for conformational changes during channel gating in the ␤2M3-␣1M1 transmembrane interface region we measured the reaction rate of pCMBS in the absence and presence of GABA with Cys substituted for residues in this region

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Summary

Background

GABAA receptor transmembrane domain undergoes conformational changes during channel gating. Intravenous general anesthetics are thought to bind in the extracellular half of transmembrane domain subunit interface between the ␤M3 and ␣M1 segments, the same interface where GABA binds in the extracellular. If the reaction rate of charged sulfhydryl-reactive reagents is different in two states of a channel, it suggests that either the access pathway to the engineered Cys residue or its local environment, steric or electrostatic, has changed. In the current work we have used SCAM and disulfide cross-linking experiments to investigate the conformational changes occurring in the ␤M3-␣M1 transmembrane subunit interface upon channel activation

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