Allosteric and hyperekplexic mutant phenotypes investigated on an a1 glycine receptor transmembrane structure.

Authors:
Moraga-Cid G, Sauguet L, Huon C, Malherbe L, Girard-Blanc C, Petres S, Murail S, Taly A, Baaden M, Delarue M, Corringer PJ.
In:
Source: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
Publication Date: (2015)
Issue: 112(9): 2865-70
Research Area:
Neurobiology
Gene Expression
Cells used in publication:
Schneider's Drosophila Line 2
Species: drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly)
Tissue Origin: embryo
Culture Media:
Experiment


Abstract

The glycine receptor (GlyR) is a pentameric ligand-gated ion channel (pLGIC) mediating inhibitory transmission in the nervous system. Its transmembrane domain (TMD) is the target of allosteric modulators such as general anesthetics and ethanol and is a major locus for hyperekplexic congenital mutations altering the allosteric transitions of activation or desensitization. We previously showed that the TMD of the human a1GlyR could be fused to the extracellular domain of GLIC, a bacterial pLGIC, to form a functional chimera called Lily. Here, we overexpress Lily in Schneider 2 insect cells and solve its structure by X-ray crystallography at 3.5 Å resolution. The TMD of the a1GlyR adopts a closed-channel conformation involving a single ring of hydrophobic residues at the center of the pore. Electrophysiological recordings show that the phenotypes of key allosteric mutations of the a1GlyR, scattered all along the pore, are qualitatively preserved in this chimera, including those that confer decreased sensitivity to agonists, constitutive activity, decreased activation kinetics, or increased desensitization kinetics. Combined structural and functional data indicate a pore-opening mechanism for the a1GlyR, suggesting a structural explanation for the effect of some key hyperekplexic allosteric mutations. The first X-ray structure of the TMD of the a1GlyR solved here using GLIC as a scaffold paves the way for mechanistic investigation and design of allosteric modulators of a human receptor.