Modulation of a model ligand-gated ion channel by amphetamine derivatives

University essay from Uppsala universitet/Strukturbiologi

Abstract: Pentameric ligand-gated ion channels are critical mediators of electrochemical signal transduction in neurons and other excitable cells, causing them to be important targets of psychoactive drugs. Structural data for these complex proteins are limited, particularly among eukaryotic family members and for the functionally critical open state. These data limitations cause knowledge gaps regarding the mechanisms of ion channel opening, gating, and modulation. However, a newly discovered bacterial family member, known as sTeLIC, shares numerous structural features with its eukaryotic relatives in our central nervous system. A recently solved electron microscopy structure depicts sTeLIC in an apparent open state with binding pockets in its extracellular domain, compatible with binding a drug with structural similarities to amphetamines, like the 4-bromoamphetamine. This project aims to provide the first structure-function evidence for direct modulation of a pentameric ligand-gated ion channel by an amphetamine. The two most essential tools used in this project to examine the effects of 4-bromoamphetamine on sTeLIC were Xenopus laevis oocytes and two-electrode voltage-clamp. These tools were necessary for the collection of gating and modulation data. Ion channel activities can be analysed by clamping sTeLIC injected Xenopus laevis oocytes into the two-electrode voltage-clamp since it can artificially control the membrane voltage of oocytes. Modulation data show that 4-bromoamphetamine is a bimodal allosteric potentiator, as well as an allosteric agonist. Residues Y104 and W75, located in the binding pocket, were selected by comparing the published open state model with an AlphaFold-generated non-conducting model. Mutating these into valine or alanine reduces the potentiation. One explanation may be that removing tyrosine's aromatic ring complicates retaining essential interactions in the binding pocket while swapping tryptophan for smaller residues could make it easier for the drug to stabilise the closed state.

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