Abstract
Alcohols and volatile anesthetics inhibit peripheral nicotinic acetylcholine receptors noncompetitively, primarily via an open-channel block mechanism. Analysis of hydrophobic mutations near the middle of the pore-forming M2 domains suggested that alcohols interact with the pore in this vicinity. To establish the extent of this inhibitory site, we created a series of hydrophobicity-altering mutations scanning most of the alpha subunit M2 domain. Using both single-channel and rapid patch perfusion electrophysiology, we measured how these mutations affect nAChR sensitivity to ethanol and hexanol. We find a near-contiguous series of amino acids in alpha-M2, extending from alphaL250 (8') to alphaV255 (13'), where mutagenesis strongly influences inhibition by alcohols. These results support the existence of a large inhibitory patch in the nAChR pore lining where interactions with alcohols are primarily due to hydrophobic forces. Ethanol appears to interact with deeper regions of this site than does hexanol. Because alcohols apparently act as open-channel blockers, we infer from our results that most of the residues between alphaL250 and alphaV255 are exposed to the aqueous environment of the pore when the channel is open. The location and extent of this site can explain why small alcohols occupy the nAChR pore at the same time as larger alcohols or charged blockers, while two large alcohols bind in a mutually exclusive manner.
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