Abstract
The gamma-aminobutyric acid-A (GABA(A)) receptor complex is allosterically modulated by a variety of substances, some of clinical importance. Barbiturates and neurosteroids augment GABA-currents and also directly gate the channel. A variety of gamma-butyrolactone analogues also modulate GABA-induced currents, with some potentiating and others inhibiting. Because several gamma-thiobutyrolactone analogues have biphasic effects on GABA currents, experiments with wild-type and picrotoxinin-insensitive GABA(A) receptors were performed to analyze whether some gamma-thiobutyrolactones interact with two distinguishable sites on the GABA(A) receptor. beta-Ethyl-beta-methyl-gamma-thiobutyrolactone inhibited GABA-induced currents at low concentrations (0.001-1 mM), but potentiated GABA-induced currents at higher concentrations (3-10 mM) in wild-type alpha1beta2gamma2-subunit containing ionophores. The related alpha-ethyl-alpha-methyl-gamma-thiobutyrolactone potentiated submaximal GABA currents in wild-type receptors at both low and high concentrations (0.1-10 mM). Mutations in the second transmembrane domain of alpha1, beta2, or gamma2 conferred picrotoxinin-insensitivity onto GABA(A) receptor complexes. When these mutated alpha1, beta2, or gamma2 subunits were incorporated into the receptor complex, beta-ethyl-beta-methyl-gamma-thiobutyrolactone potentiated GABA currents over the entire concentration range (0.1-10 mM). Neither the potentiating activity nor the EC50 of alpha-ethyl-alpha-methyl-gamma-thiobutyrolactone changed in the mutant receptors. Further studies demonstrated that the mutations did not affect the EC50 of chlordiazepoxide or phenobarbital. These and our earlier results identify a modulatory site on the GABA(A) receptor distinct from that interacting with barbiturates, benzodiazepines, and steroids. Additionally, they show that the gamma-butyrolactones probably interact at two different sites on the ionophore to produce opposite effects on GABA-mediated current.
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