Lingle C J, Maconochie D, Steinbach J H
Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110.
J Membr Biol. 1992 Mar;126(3):195-217. doi: 10.1007/BF00232318.
Work over the past ten years has greatly increased our understanding of both the structure and function of the muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. There is a strongly supported general picture of how the receptor functions: agonist binds rapidly to sites of low affinity and channel opening occurs at a rate comparable to the agonist dissociation rate. Channel closing is slow, so the channel has a high probability of being open if both agonist-binding sites are occupied by ACh. Results of expression studies have shown that each subunit can influence AChR activation and have given a structural basis for the major physiological change known for muscle AChR, the developmental change in AChR activation. These general statements notwithstanding, there are still major areas of uncertainty which limit our understanding. We have emphasized these areas of uncertainty in this review, to indicate what needs to be done. First, the quantitative estimates of rate constants are not as strongly supported as they should be. The major reasons are twofold--uncertainties about the interpretation of components in the kinetic data and difficulties of resolving brief events. As a result, any inferences about the functional consequences of structural alterations must remain tenuous. Second, the functional behavior of individual AChRs is not as well understood as it should be. The kinetic behavior of an individual receptor clearly can be complex (section II). In addition, there is evidence that superimposed on this complexity there may be stable and kinetically distinguishable populations of receptors (section III). Until the basis for the kinetically defined populations is clarified, kinetic parameters for receptors of defined structure cannot be unambiguously obtained. Finally, it is not surprising that the studies of AChR of altered structure have not given definitive results. Two reasons should be apparent from the preceding points: there is not a fully supported approach for kinetic analysis, and the "normal" population may not be clearly defined. An additional complication is also emerging, in that the available data support the idea that specific residues distributed over all subunits may influence AChR activation. This possibility renders the task of analysis that much more difficult. The muscle nicotinic AChR has served as a prototype for the family of transmitter-gated membrane channels, which includes the muscle and neuronal nicotinic receptors, the GABAA, the glycine and possibly the non-NMDA excitatory amino acid receptor (Stroud et al., 1990). It is interesting to note that the functional properties of the GABAA receptor, probably the best-studied of the other members of the family are rather similar.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
过去十年的研究极大地增进了我们对肌肉烟碱型乙酰胆碱受体的结构和功能的理解。关于该受体如何发挥功能,已有一个得到有力支持的总体认识:激动剂迅速结合到低亲和力位点,通道开放的速率与激动剂解离速率相当。通道关闭缓慢,因此如果两个激动剂结合位点都被乙酰胆碱占据,通道很可能处于开放状态。表达研究结果表明,每个亚基都能影响乙酰胆碱受体的激活,并为肌肉乙酰胆碱受体已知的主要生理变化,即乙酰胆碱受体激活的发育变化,提供了结构基础。尽管有这些一般性的描述,但仍存在一些主要的不确定领域,限制了我们的理解。在本综述中,我们强调了这些不确定领域,以指明需要做些什么。首先,速率常数的定量估计没有得到应有的有力支持。主要原因有两方面——动力学数据中各成分解释的不确定性以及解析短暂事件的困难。因此,关于结构改变的功能后果的任何推断都必然是不确定的。其次,单个乙酰胆碱受体的功能行为没有得到应有的充分理解。单个受体的动力学行为显然可能很复杂(第二节)。此外,有证据表明,在这种复杂性之上,可能存在稳定且在动力学上可区分的受体群体(第三节)。在明确动力学定义的群体的基础之前,无法明确获得确定结构的受体的动力学参数。最后,对结构改变的乙酰胆碱受体的研究没有给出明确结果并不奇怪。从上述几点可以明显看出两个原因:没有一个得到充分支持的动力学分析方法,并且“正常”群体可能没有明确界定。另一个复杂情况也正在出现,因为现有数据支持这样一种观点,即分布在所有亚基上的特定残基可能影响乙酰胆碱受体的激活。这种可能性使分析任务变得更加困难。肌肉烟碱型乙酰胆碱受体已成为递质门控膜通道家族的原型,该家族包括肌肉和神经元烟碱受体、GABAA受体、甘氨酸受体以及可能的非NMDA兴奋性氨基酸受体(斯特劳德等人,1990年)。有趣的是,GABAA受体的功能特性,可能是该家族其他成员中研究得最好的,与之相当相似。(摘要截选至400字)