The glycine receptor deficiency of the mutant mouse spastic: evidence for normal glycine receptor structure and localization
Open Access
- 1 May 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 6 (5), 1358-1364
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.06-05-01358.1986
Abstract
Homozygotes of the mutant mouse spastic exhibit reduced binding of 3H- strychnine to homogenates from various regions of the CNS compared with unaffected littermates (White and Heller, 1982). Here we report evidence that the spastic mutation coincides with a reduced concentration and an unaltered structure of the glycine receptor in spinal cord. Scatchard analysis of 3H-strychnine binding revealed a single binding site with a Bmax of 267 +/- 62 fmol/mg protein for spastic and of 864 +/- 220 fmol/mg protein for control mice; no difference was found for the corresponding KD values. Also Ki values of glycine for 3H-strychnine binding and displacement of 3H-strychnine by beta-alanine and taurine were indistinguishable for both preparations. Photoaffinity labeling of synaptic membranes with 3H-strychnine identified an Mr = 48,000 polypeptide in both control and spastic mouse membranes. Tryptic digestion of these membranes produced radiolabeled peptide fragments of identical molecular weights, suggesting that the proteolytic cleavage sites around the antagonist binding site are conserved in the mutant glycine receptor protein. Glycine receptors from both control and mutant mice were purified by affinity chromatography on aminostrychnine agarose. SDS/PAGE revealed three polypeptides of Mr = 48,000, 58,000, and 93,000 in both receptor preparations. Monoclonal antibodies directed against different subunits of the glycine receptor were applied to an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The same pattern of immunoreactivity was obtained for glycine receptor from spinal cord of spastic homozygotes, control mice, and rats, suggesting conservation of the antigenic epitopes in the mutant receptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Solubilization of the glycine receptor from rat spinal cordBrain Research, 1981
- Unmasking of cryptic binding sites for α-bungarotoxin in membrane fractions from chick retinaBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1981
- UV light-induced cross-linking of strychnine to the glycine receptor of rat spinal cord membranesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1981
- A simplified ultrasensitive silver stain for detecting proteins in polyacrylamide gelsAnalytical Biochemistry, 1980
- Gene order in linkage group XVI of the house mouseJournal of Heredity, 1979
- Effect of myasthenic patients' immunoglobulin on acetylcholine receptor turnover: selectivity of degradation process.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1978
- Acetylcholine receptor. Responses to drug binding.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1977
- ?-aminobutyric acid metabolism in brain homogenates of the spastic mouseBiochemical Genetics, 1977
- A pharmacological study of the depression of spinal neurones by glycine and related amino acidsExperimental Brain Research, 1968
- Influence of Aminooxyacetic Acid, a -Aminobutyrate Transaminase Inhibitor, on Hereditary Spastic Defect in the Mouse.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1962