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A conserved mechanism for gating in an ionotropic glutamate receptor. | LitMetric

A conserved mechanism for gating in an ionotropic glutamate receptor.

J Biol Chem

Weis Center for Research, Geisinger Clinic, Danville, Pennsylvania 17822-2621, USA.

Published: June 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • iGluR channels, like GluA2, control synaptic activity by opening and closing in response to glutamate binding, but the mechanism behind gate opening is not fully understood.
  • Substituting a key alanine residue (Ala-621) in the pore helix of the channel with glycine led to a channel that is more active and sensitive to glutamate, while mutation of another residue (Met-629) reduced activity, highlighting the roles of these residues in channel function.
  • iGluRs and potassium channels have similar structural features, but iGluRs utilize a less flexible alanine as a hinge at a critical position to keep their activity low until activated by a ligand, differentiating them from potassium channels

Article Abstract

Ionotropic glutamate receptor (iGluR) channels control synaptic activity. The crystallographic structure of GluA2, the prototypical iGluR, reveals a clamshell-like ligand-binding domain (LBD) that closes in the presence of glutamate to open a gate on the pore lining α-helix. How LBD closure leads to gate opening remains unclear. Here, we show that bending the pore helix at a highly conserved alanine residue (Ala-621) below the gate is responsible for channel opening. Substituting Ala-621 with the smaller more flexible glycine resulted in a basally active, nondesensitizing channel with ∼39-fold increase in glutamate potency without affecting surface expression or binding. On GluA2(A621G), the partial agonist kainate showed efficacy similar to a full agonist, and competitive antagonists CNQX and DNQX acted as a partial agonists. Met-629 in GluA2 sits above the gate and is critical in transmitting LBD closure to the gate. Substituting Met-629 with the flexible glycine resulted in reduced channel activity and glutamate potency. The pore regions in potassium channels are structurally similar to iGluRs. Whereas potassium channels typically use glycines as a hinge for gating, iGluRs use the less flexible alanine as a hinge at a similar position to maintain low basal activity allowing for ligand-mediated gating.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3696660PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.465187DOI Listing

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