Photoactivation and dissociation of agonist molecules at the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in voltage-clamped rat myoballs
Abstract
The photochemical properties of the azobenzene derivative, Bis-Q, were exploited to carry out an agonist concentration jump followed by a molecular rearrangement of bound agonist molecules at acetylcholine (ACh) receptor channels of voltage-clamped rat myoballs. Myoballs were bathed in solutions containing low concentrations of cis-Bis-Q, the inactive isomer. Whole-cell current relaxations were studied following a light flash that produced a concentration jump of agonist, trans-Bis-Q, followed by a second flash that produced net trans----cis photoisomerizations of Bis-Q molecules. The concentration-jump relaxation provided a measure of the mean burst duration for ACh receptor channels occupied by trans-Bis-Q (7.7 ms, 22 degrees C). The second current relaxation was a more rapid conductance decrease (phase 1, τ = 0.8 ms). Phase 1 may represent either the burst duration for receptors initially occupied by a single cis- and a single trans-Bis-Q molecule or that for unliganded receptors. Single-channel current recordings from excised outside-out membrane patches showed that single channels open following an agonist concentration jump comparable to that used in the whole-cell experiments; when many such records were averaged, a synthetic macroscopic relaxation was produced. Individual open channels closed faster following a flash that promoted trans→cis photoisomerizations of the bound ligand, thus confirming the whole-cell observations of phase 1.
Additional Information
© 1985 The Biophysical Society. Published by Elsevier Under an Elsevier user license. Received for publication 5 November 1984 and in final form 8 April 1985. The authors would like to thank Drs. B. Sakmann, D. Corey, and R. Horn for help with techniques and Dr. R. E. Sheridan for help in setting up the equipment. The Bis-Q crystals were kindly provided by Drs. B. F. Erlanger and N. H. Wasserman; Ms. T. Stevens maintained the cultured cells. This work was supported by fellowships from the Muscular Dystrophy Association of America (L. D. Chabala) and the Del E. Webb Foundation (L. D. Chabala and A. M. Gurney), a Fulbright-Hayes travel grant (A. M. Gurney) and by United States Public Health Service grant No. NS-11756.Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC1329315
- Eprint ID
- 105996
- DOI
- 10.1016/s0006-3495(85)83777-2
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20201012-152226405
- Muscular Dystrophy Association of America
- Del E. Webb Foundation
- Fulbright-Hayes
- NIH
- NS-11756
- Created
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2020-10-12Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field