4.6 Article

A C-terminal lysine that controls human P2X4 receptor desensitization

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 281, Issue 22, Pages 15044-15049

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M600442200

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust Funding Source: Medline

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Receptor desensitization can determine the time course of transmitter action and profoundly alter sensitivity to drugs. Among P2X receptors, ion currents through homomeric P2X(4) receptors exhibit intermediate desensitization when compared with P2X(1) and P2X(3) ( much faster) and P2X(2) and P2X(7) ( slower). We recorded membrane currents in HEK293 cells transfected to express the human P2X4 receptor. The decline in current during a 4-s application of ATP ( 100 mu M) was about 30%; this was not different during whole-cell or perforated patch recording. Alanine-scanning mutagenesis of the intracellular C terminus identified two positions with much accelerated desensitization kinetics (Lys(373): 92% and Tyr(374): 74%). At position 373, substitution of Arg or Cys also strongly accelerated desensitization: however, in the case of K373C the wild-type phenotype was fully restored by adding ethylammonium methanethiosulfonate. At position 374, phenylalanine could replace tyrosine. These results indicate that wild-type desensitization properties requires an aromatic moiety at position 374 and an amino rather than a guanidino group at position 373. These residues lie between previously identified motifs involved in membrane trafficking (YXXXK and YXXGL) and implicates the C-terminal also in rearrangements leading to channel closing during the presence of agonist.

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