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Translational Impact of Basic Research Studies of Nicotinic
Acetylcholine Receptors
Ronald J. Lukas, PhD
Laboratory of Neurochemistry, Division of
Neurobiology, Barrow Neurological Institute, St. Joseph's Hospital
and Medical Center, Phoenix, Arizona
*Courtesy of Ronald J. Lukas, PhD
The Lukas
Laboratory
Ronald J. Lukas obtained his PhD in biophysics for work on
molecular mechanisms of muscle contraction at the State University
of New York Health Sciences Center in Brooklyn after initiating
doctoral work in physics at Columbia University in Manhattan. His
postdoctoral work was on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors with
Edward L. Bennett in the Melvin Calvin Laboratory of Chemical
Biodynamics and the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory at the University
of California, Berkeley, and on nerve growth factor with Eric
Shooter in the Department of Neurobiology at Stanford University
School of Medicine. Yen-Ping Kuo obtained her BS in medical
technology at the National Taiwan University, MS in clinical
laboratory science at Michigan State University, and PhD in
microbiology and molecular biology at Ohio State University for
work on archaea. Allan W. Scruggs has a BS in
biomedical/biochemical engineering from the University of Southern
California and a PhD in biochemistry from Arizona State University
where he studied engineered fluorescent proteins. Marsha Segerberg
has a BS in biology from the University of Cincinnati and a PhD in
biology from the University of Wisconsin for electrophysiological
studies. Lori M. Buhlman has a BS in psychology from Michigan State
University and is a neuroscience PhD candidate at the University of
Arizona. Teresa A. Murray has a BSE in biomedical engineering and
is a biomedical engineering PhD candidate at Arizona State
University. Linda Lucero obtained her BS in microbiology from
the University of Texas at El Paso and an MS in microbiology and
immunology from the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.
Kari A. Lindenberger has bachelor degrees in biochemistry and
French from the University of Kansas and an MS in biomedical
sciences from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester. J. Brek Eaton holds a
BS in biology from Arizona State University. Syndia K.
Marxer-Miller has a BS in life sciences from Arizona State
University West. Jennifer Stevens holds a BS in molecular biology
from the University of Arizona. Mercedeh Saba, who has a BS in
biochemistry from the State University of New York at Stony Brook,
and Kim Walker, who holds a BS in microbiology from Arizona State
University, work in the Clinical Assay Development Laboratory
overseen by Dr. Lukas and also participate in research studies
requiring analysis using immunoassays.
Studies of chemical signaling mediated by the neurotransmitter,
acetylcholine, and its receptor targets, including nicotinic
acetylcholine receptors, date from the 1850s. The current concepts
about chemical transmission and receptive substances came from
insights gained early in the 20th century. More recent discoveries
reveal a rich diversity in cholinergic receptors and means of
cholinergic signaling that present research challenges but
therapeutic opportunities. Current nicotinic receptor research is
providing tangible insights into the molecular and cellular
mechanisms involved in many maladies including nicotine dependence,
Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, schizophrenia, depression,
and attention deficit disorder. This article illustrates how basic
nicotinic receptor research informs and is informed by clinical
studies and how it serves as a model for contemporary,
translational, and biomedical research.
Key
Words: acetylcholine, nicotine, receptors,
transmitters
Abbreviations used: ACh, acetylcholine; cDNA,
copy DNA; DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid; GABA, gamma amino butyric
acid; MPTP, N-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine; mRNA,
messenger RNA; nAChR, nicotinic ACh receptors; RNA, ribonucleic
acid
Much of the current understanding about
synaptic neurotransmission is based on studies of chemical
signaling through ACh.[15,16,18] ACh is stored in syn-
aptic vesicles and released from electrically active nerve
terminals. Actions on the postsynaptic target of ACh that are
mimicked by the mushroom alkaloid, muscarine (see Figure 1 in
Lukas[15]), and those that are particularly sensitive to
blockade by atropine are mediated by muscarinic ACh
receptors. These receptors are prototypes of the extensive,
G-protein-coupled family of metabotropic neurotransmitter
receptors.[15]
Muscarinic ACh receptors are composed of
monomers or dimers of integral membrane proteins containing seven
transmembrane domains. The signals that they mediate affect
intracellular levels of second-messengers (e.g., cyclic
nucleotides, inositol phosphates, calcium ions, depending on the
receptor, and interacting G-proteins). Subsequent effects can
include changes in protein kinase activities, cellular metabolism,
and gene expression.
Postsynaptic actions of ACh that are mimicked
by the tobacco alkaloid, nicotine (see Figure 1 in Lukas[15]), are
mediated by nAChR. These receptors are prototypes of the
superfamily of neurotransmitter-gated ion channels (ionotropic
neurotransmitter receptors).[15,16,18] Depending on the
specific neurotransmitter, the binding of chemical messengers
"gates" or causes channels to open, increasing permeability to
sodium or chloride ions. Electrical activity in the
postsynaptic cell is then enhanced or suppressed, respectively.
In the brain, simultaneous inputs through
chemical messengers are integrated across neuronal soma and
dendritic trees. If the excitatory-to-inhibitory ratio and
the absolute level of excitatory signals reach a certain threshold,
the neuron becomes electrically active and completes the next
segment in the neuronal circuit.
Distribution and Function of Nicotinic AChR
nAChR are broadly distributed across the brain and body. By
serving as ligand-gated cation channels,[2,3] they mediate classic
excitatory neurotransmission in response to ACh. Subsynaptic
to motor neuronal terminals, the activation of nAChR by
synaptically released ACh makes movement possible by allowing
sodium ions to enter muscle cells. The resulting localized
depolarization of the muscle cell membrane potential ultimately
triggers the intracellular release of calcium and activation of the
contractile apparatus.
Fight-or-flight responses, homeostatic
mechanisms, and subconscious control of bodily functions through
the autonomic nervous system require the release of ACh from
preganglionic nerve terminals and stimulation of postganglionic
neuronal electrical activity through nAChR. Evidence
continues to emerge that nAChR also play roles in classic
excitatory neurotransmission in the brain and spinal cord.
These receptors thus contribute to perception, emotion, and
cognition, in part as revealed by reports of individuals who use
tobacco products and are thus exposed to and experience the effects
of nicotine on the brain. Evidence also supports the
expression of nAChR in the enteric nervous system, on pulmonary
neuroendocrine cells, on tendon fibroblasts, on keratinocytes, in
lymphocytes and in thymic stromal elements of the immune system, in
the adrenal gland, in the microvascular system, in the prostate
gland, in the testes, and in spermatozoa. The presence of
nAChR in the cochlea, retina, and olfactory system indicates
prominent roles in sensation. Little work has been done on
nAChR in these tissues. However, new roles for nAChR, and
perhaps explanations for the effects of smoking on them, will
likely be revealed by expanded investigations.
Studies in the nervous system as well as in
the other tissues mentioned indicate novel roles for nAChR beyond
mediation of classic neurotransmission.[16,18] For example,
nAChR on or near nerve terminals may modulate the release of other
neurotransmitters, including GABA, glutamate, dopamine, serotonin,
norepinephrine, and ACh itself. In addition to their function
as ACh-gated sodium ion channels, many nAChR have significant
calcium ion permeability. The entry of calcium ions into
nerve terminals is the signal that stimulates neurotransmitter
release. Calcium ion-permeable, presynaptic nAChR thus are
positioned and equipped to modulate neurotransmitter release,
perhaps even in the absence of an action potential arriving at
those nerve terminals.
Cholinergic signaling through nAChR can change
synaptic contacts at many stages of life. Depending on
factors that remain poorly understood, ACh and nicotine can either
attract or deflect neuronal growth cones. This function,
however, indicates how dendritic and perhaps axonal architecture
can be influenced by nicotinic cholinergic signals. Relevant
effects include influences on glutamatergic input to the auditory
cortex during a critical phase of development.[23] Thus,
throughout the life span, nAChR participate in completing neuronal
electrical circuits; influence where, when, and how the substrates
for that circuitry are established; and affect the chemical soup in
which that circuitry is bathed.
Clearly, nAChR play many critical roles in the
nervous system. If something goes wrong with nAChR and
nicotinic cholinergic signaling, pathology is a likely
consequence. nAChR also are ideally situated to serve as
targets for the manipulation of brain and body functions.
There are many examples of how the actions at nAChR of toxins or of
recreational or medicinal drugs influence organisms negatively or
positively.
Figure 1. Schematic drawing indicates the subunit
composition of vertebrate muscle-type nACh
and the postulated arrangement of subunits in
the closed, pentameric assembly when viewed from
above or from the extracellular space. The two
alpha 1 subunits are separated by either the
gamma (fetal form) or epsilon (adult form). Li-
gand-binding sites (yellow ovals) are located
at interfaces between alpha 1 and gamma/epsi-
lon or delta subunits. Each subunit of the pair
provides contact points not only for assembly
of the pentamer but also for ligand recognition.
The subunits are clustered about a central axis
that represents the channel itself at the trans-
membrane level orthogonal to the plane of the
illustration and the channel "vestibule" just
above or extracellular to it.
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Diversity of Structure and Function of nAChR
The classic prototype of a ligand-gated ion channel is the
muscle-type nAChR (Fig. 1).[16,18] It is a heteropentamer of
nAChR building blocks or "subunits," each of which is encoded by a
different gene with a unique chromosomal location. The
muscle-type receptor subunits are named alpha 1, beta 1, delta and
either gamma (found in the fetal form of mammalian muscle-type
receptors) or epsilon (found in the adult form).[19] The
subunits of the muscle-type nAChR assemble like staves of a barrel
to create a central void, part of which is the ion channel.
Ligand binding is the initial step in a process that leads to
channel opening.
Each nAChR subunit is a transmembrane protein
with the following topology. (1) An extensive, N-terminal,
extracellular domain contains sites for ligand recognition and for
inter-subunit interactions critical to the formation of the closed
assembly. (2) Four transmembrane domains not only anchor the
receptor into the membrane but also either line the channel per se
(the second transmembrane domain) or form the outer "crust" of the
transmembrane region (first, third and fourth transmembrane
domains). (3) A short, intracellular segment is between the first
and second transmembrane domains. (4) A short, extracellular
segment between the second and third transmembrane domains may
participate in transduction of ligand binding to channel opening.
(5) A short, extracellular, C-terminal ending follows the fourth
transmembrane domain. (6) A large, intracellular or cytoplasmic
loop is between the third and fourth transmembrane domains (see
Model 1 in Figure 5 of Lukas[15]).
The large, N-terminal, extracellular domain,
the four transmembrane domains, and the regions of the large
cytoplasmic loop nearest or proximal to the third and fourth
transmembrane domains (which may form five radiating tunnels that
could serve as cytoplasmic extensions of the central transmembrane
pore) have amino acid sequences that are highly conserved across
all known mammalian nAChR subunits. However, the remaining,
"nested" cytoplasmic loop sequences are unique for each nAChR
subunit and thus serve as a distinguishing fingerprint.
From a basic and diagnostic laboratory
perspective, this fingerprint is important. Antibodies
specifically targeting these sequences can be used to identify and
discriminate nAChR subunit building blocks. Moreover,
oligonucleotide or RNA probes for nAChR subunit mRNA or gene DNA
and oligonucleotide primers needed for amplification via the
reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction of subunit message
or genes can be designed to be specific for each nAChR subunit.
Functionally, the unique amino acid sequences
of cytoplasmic loops provide substrates that permit the
following. First, differential trafficking of nAChR subunits
to distinct parts of the cell (i.e., dendrites, soma, axons) can
occur. Second, differential posttranslational modification of
subunits, for example, by phosphorylation, is possible with
consequences for receptor assembly, trafficking, and
function. Third, differential interaction with cytoskeletal
and cytoplasmic elements potentially allows subunit-specificity in
trafficking and signal transduction through other intracellular
pathways.
Initial protein chemical studies of nAChR
focused on receptor-rich electric tissue of electric eels and rays,
which have 100 to 1000 times more receptors than innervated
mammalian muscle. This work was aided by the ability of
toxins from the venoms of poisonous snakes (e.g., cobra, krait,
mamba, and sea snake families) to act as probes for nAChR.
Like curare, these toxins have the ability to block muscle-type
nAChR function by occluding the binding site on receptors for
nicotine or ACh.
The toxins are proteins composed of about 72
amino acids. They can be immobilized to allow the capture of
receptors. They can be radiolabeled to allow receptors to be
counted while they are purified and then studied to determine if
other drugs can prevent toxin-receptor interactions. This
approach defines the pharmacological profile of drugs acting at
nAChR. Finally, the toxins can be tagged with enzymes or
fluorophores to permit localization of nAChR at cellular or
subcellular levels in different tissues.
Once muscle-type nAChR were isolated, the
N-terminal amino acid sequence of each subunit was
determined. This work set the stage for the creation of
degenerate oligonucleotides that were used as initial probes to
identify, clone, and sequence complementary or cDNA corresponding
to genes and mRNAs encoding each subunit. For almost a
century, nAChR in muscle have been known to have different
properties than nAChR elsewhere in the body. However, the
bases for those differences had been
elusive.
Low-stringency hybridization of muscle-type nAChR subunit cDNA
sequences with entities in cDNA libraries from brain and other
tissues led to the identification of a family of nAChR subunits
from vertebrates that now include alpha 1 through alpha 10, beta 1
through beta 4, gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits.[3,19]
Some of these subunits are more alike than others, and the
estimated evolutionary distances between them indicate an initial
divergence from a primordial gene (Fig. 2). The vertebrate
nAChR subunit tree branched with regularity, and the most recently
evolved are the alpha 2/alpha 4, alpha 3/alpha 6, alpha 5/beta 3
and beta 2/beta 4 pairs.
Figure 2. Dendrogram illustrates apparent evolutionary distances
between nAChR subunits. The phylogenetic tree was generated using
the alignment program Clustal and human sequences for all the
indicated subunits except for a8, which has been identified in
chickens but in no mammals. Sequences corresponding to the signal
sequence and the nested, nonconserved regions of the second
cytoplasmic loop were omitted, and the PAM 250 residue weight table
was used. Analyses changing program parameters and specific
sequences queried result in different dendrograms and subunit
relationships. Therefore, neither this phylogenetic tree shown nor
any other should be considered a definitive representation of the
evolutionary distances between subunits.
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Figure 3. Schematic diagram indicates some of the rules for nAChR
subunit combinations.
The subunits alpha 7, alpha 8 and alpha 9 have the capacity to
assemble as homomers. In
the chick, however, alpha 7 and alpha 8 can exist in the same
assembly. Alpha 10 can com-
bine in binary fashion with alpha 9 subunits to form a more highly
functional nAChR than
created by alpha 9 subunits alone. Other binary complexes can be
formed containing alpha
2, alpha 3, alpha 4, or alpha 6 subunits with beta 2 or beta 4
subunits into which alpha 5
and beta 3 subunit "wild-cards" can also integrate to form ternary
complexes. Evidence also
indicates (dashed lines) that nAChR can contain alpha 3 plus alpha
4, alpha 3 plus alpha 6,
or alpha 4 plus alpha 6 subunits or beta 2 plus beta 4 subunits,
thus forming quaternary or
even a heteropentamer with five different kinds of subunits. The
color coding suggests pos-
sible positions of subunits in closed assemblies.
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Thus, the long-identified diversity in nAChR
subtypes could be explained, at least partially, by the diversity
in the genes that encode nAChR building blocks or subunits.
By definition, the diverse family of nAChR subtypes bind nicotine
and ACh and function as ligand-gated ion channels. However,
the distinctive profiles for drug interactions, kinetics for
channel opening and closing, and tissue-specific and subcellular
locations of each nAChR subtype partially reflect the diversity in
the composition of their subunits.
Formally, there is the possibility that there
are just under 17[5] possible nAChR subtypes (five positions per
pentamer, 17 possible subunits per position, but some with
degenerate outcomes). However, some rules seem to dictate the
kinds of nAChR subtypes that are assembled (Fig. 3).[3,18,19]
Much of this understanding has been established using frog oocyte
expression systems. For a given set of subunits, RNA or cDNA
is injected into the cytoplasm or nucleus, respectively, of the
physically large eggs. The transcription and translation
functions of the oocytes can then be hijacked, and success in
forming ligand-binding and functional nAChR can be evaluated.
Oocyte expression studies indicate that the
muscle-type nAChR subunits are not found in any other assemblies,
consistent with tissue studies performed to date. To some
degree, in the comparatively liberal oocyte expression system, beta
2 and beta 4 subunits can substitute for beta 1 subunits in
assemblies with the other muscle-type nAChR subunits.
However, this substitution does not seem to happen naturally.
Thus, alpha 2 through alpha 10 and beta 2 through beta b4 subunits
(alpha subunits are distinguished from the others because they have
relatively rare tandem cysteine residues at about the same location
in their large extracellular domains) are the prime candidates for
the formation of nAChR found in neurons and perhaps other
tissues.
Among the phylogenetically most ancient of
these subunits are alpha 7, alpha 8 (found in chickens but not yet
in mammals), and alpha 9. In the oocyte expression system,
these subunits have the capacity to form homo-oligomers, that is, a
receptor where each position in the pentamer is occupied by the
same kind of subunit. In the chick, there is evidence for
homomeric alpha 7- and homomeric alpha 8-nAChR. There is also
evidence for co-assembly of these subunits, although there seems to
be no apparent alpha 8 subunit in mammals, precluding the existence
of mammalian alpha 7 alpha 8-nAChR.
Although alpha 9 subunits can form homomers,
levels of functional expression are enhanced dramatically when
co-expressed with alpha 10 subunits. This finding suggests
binary complex formation in which one or more positions in the
pentamer can be occupied by different subunits. Binary
complex formation seems to be a rule for the assembly of nAChR
containing alpha 2, alpha 3, alpha 4 or alpha 6 subunits in
pairwise fashion with either beta 2 or beta 4 subunits. None
of these subunits can efficiently form functional nAChR on their
own.
nAChR alpha 5 and beta 3 subunits seem to be
wild cards. They do not form functional receptors either
alone or in pairwise or binary combination with any other
subunits. However, alpha 5 and beta 3 subunits can integrate
into binary alpha 2/ alpha 3/ alpha 4/ alpha 6- beta 2/ beta
4-nAChR to form ternary complexes with novel functional and
ligand-binding properties. Moreover, some functional nAChR
can contain both beta 2 and beta 4 subunits, and co-assembly has
been observed for alpha 3- alpha 4, alpha 3- alpha 6 and alpha 4-
alpha 6 pairs. That is, other ternary and quaternary nAChR
can be formed, and perhaps each position in the pentamer could be
occupied by a different subunit.
In any event, muscle-type nAChR a1 and non-
alpha 1 family genes diverged through a process that culminated in
the emergence of delta and then of the gamma/epsilon subunits to
allow formation of a quaternary complex. Nonetheless,
nonmuscle-type nAChR composed of comparatively newer building
blocks but with comparable structural complexity can exist.
The existence of different genes encoding
these subunits also allows a high degree of flexibility in
controlling the expression of nAChR subunits, which must have an
evolutionary advantage. The promoters and enhancers for these
genes are unique. Epigenetic influences impinging on cells
help dictate which of the cadre of nAChR subunit genes is expressed
and when.
This process can have developmentally relevant
consequences. For example, muscle-type nAChR containing gamma
subunits from low-conductance channels that are open for a long
time are ideal for sensing the arrival of developing ACh-releasing
motor nerve terminals. In comparison, innervated muscle nAChR
containing epsilon subunits form channels that open and close more
quickly but that gate larger amounts of current. Such
structures are ideally suited to control sequences of muscle
contraction in response to rapid pulses of neurotransmitter
release.
Thus, nAChR are diverse. Different nAChR
subtypes are classified by the kinds of their constituent subunits
and the stoichiometries between them. Aside from muscle-type
nAChR, a prominent nAChR subtype found in autonomic ganglia
contains alpha 3 and beta 4 subunits. nAChR composed of alpha
7 subunits as homomers are prominent in the brain and autonomic
neurons. The most abundant brain nAChR with a high affinity
for nicotine is composed of alpha 4 and beta 2 subunits.
nAChR alpha 3 and alpha 6 subunits are richest in midbrain dopamine
neurons.
Figure 4. Homology model for assembly of nAChR alpha 7 subunit
N-terminal extracellular
domains as viewed from below or the plasma membrane. Using the
atomic coordinates for
the structure of the ACh-binding protein, sequences for the human
alpha 7 subunits were
imposed by Dr. Robert D. Scavetta, who rendered each subunit in the
pentameric assembly
in a different color. Notations on the subunit indicate (1) the
C-terminal end of the poly-
peptide at a point where it would connect to the M1 first
transmembrane domain in the full
sequence receptor (highlighted on the other subunits by the white
dots); (2) the tip of
the cystine loop, which ends near the plane of the membrane
(highlighted on the other sub-
units by a white rectangle); (3) the cystine loop (cystine link
indicated by yellow sticks);
and (4) the tip of the loop containing the tandem cysteine
residues, which form another di-
sulfide link at the ligand-binding site.
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When at least one constituent subunit in an
nAChR subtype is known, but there are or may be others, an "*"is
used to designate such a possibility.[19] For example,
ganglionic nAChR known to contain alpha 3 or alpha 3 and beta 4
subunits but that also may have other assembly partners are called
alpha 3*- or alpha 3 beta 4*-nAChR. Before our understanding
of these signaling molecules is complete, much more work is needed
to define native nAChR subtypes; their tissue, cellular, and
subcellular distributions; the consequences of their activation or
blockade; and how these parameters change during development and
aging.
The continuing work of Unwin and colleagues
has provided tremendous insight into the structure and function of
nAChR. They used X-ray scattering from electron microscopic
images of tubular arrays of electric tissue nAChR.33 X-ray
crystallography has been used to study a snail glial cell
ACh-binding protein.[1] The latter is a homologue of a nAChR
homopentameric assembly of large, extracellular domains. Its
structure reveals important features of nAChR, including their
ligand-binding domains, and it is amazingly consistent with
findings from site-directed mutagenesis studies of muscle and other
nAChR subtypes.8
Dr. Robert D. Scavetta created and I annotated
a homology model based on the ACh-binding protein subunit atomic
coordinates, which were overlayed with human nAChR a7 subunit
N-terminal extracellular domain sequences (Figs. 4 and 5).
When viewed from below (i.e., from the plasma membrane, Fig. 4), a
clockwise arrangement of features is evident for each subunit: (1)
the C-terminal end of the extracellular domain as it transitions to
the first cytoplamsic loop, (2) the tip of the so-called "cystine
loop," (3) the disulfide link between cysteine residues that
defines the cystine loop, and (4) the tandem cysteine
disulfide. The cystine loop is a feature preserved across all
members of the four-transmembrane domain superfamily of
neurotransmitter-gated ion channels, including nAChR and ionotropic
GABAA, glycine, and serotonin-3 receptors. This tip seems to be
positioned to exert close communication with the transmembrane
segments of the receptor. The tandem cysteine disulfide is
known to be in the ligand-binding domain and overlaps spatially
with segments of the neighboring subunit at the interface between
them.
Figure 5. Homology model for assembled, nAChR alpha 7 subunit
N-terminal extracellular
domains as viewed from the side with the plane of the membrane
resting just below the
image. This perspective on the structure, which differs from that
initially generated by
Dr. Robert D. Scavetta and illustrated in Figure 4, enhances
visibility of the features
annotated on the subunit presented in gray such as (1) the
N-terminal alpha-helical
segment, (2) the nearby "main immunogenic region"(MIR)
at the centrifugal or more
axial edge of the most extracellular aspect of the structure, (3)
the tandem cysteine
residues at the "wingtip" and the end of another loop
that apposes the neighboring
subunit, (4) the cystine loop and (5) its tip at the membrane edge
of the structure,
and (6) the C-terminus of this segment of the subunit where it
would extend into the
first transmembrane domain. This model is an aid to understanding
the structure and
function of nAChR, the design of drugs that would interact with
them, and antigen se-
lection for the generation of useful antibodies.
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When viewed from the side (Fig. 5), each
subunit resembles an element in an interwoven basket.
Anti-parallel beta-pleated sheets represent bundled threads
crossing each other to form the interwoven torso of the
subunit. At the ends of each assembly are loops of different
lengths. The cystine loop ends near the plasma membrane region and
just clockwise (viewed from below) from the C-terminus of the same
subunit. Another loop ends at the tandem cysteine residues
and forms a wingtip overlaying sequences from the neighboring
subunit. A third, more extracellularly apposed, extended loop
is called the "main immunogenic region"[13] because it is targeted
by antibodies. These antibodies recognize complexes of
muscle-type nAChRcoupled through the ligand-binding domains with
curaremimetic neurotoxins. The main immunogenic region is
located in each subunit near the a-helical structure that becomes
the N-terminal region of the domain after removal of the signal
sequence. During translation on the ribosome, the signal
sequence specifies the transit of the protein extracellular domain
through to the endoplasmic reticulum lumen for eventual
extracellular exposure.
When viewed from below, just counterclockwise
from the tandem cysteine loop are two other loops. These
loops contain residues on their tips that also influence ligand
binding. On the opposing face of the neighboring subunit,
residues at the tips of two loops just clockwise from the main
immunogenic region also influence ligand binding. Thus,
interfaces between subunits provide points of contact and
recognition that are essential to the formation of the closed,
pentameric assembly. They are also points for ligand
recognition.
ACh and nicotine are thought to bind at
subunit interfaces (Fig. 1, yellow ovals). It is easy to
imagine how those ligands can gain access to the binding pocket
between subunits and behind the tandem cysteine loop. The
wingtip would then be pushed away from the axial center of the
structure. This push would cause the interwoven torso,
including the cysteine loop, and the attached (but not illustrated
in these images) second transmembrane domain to rotate, leading to
channel opening.
Relevance to Health and Disease
Our work has focused on the use of cell lines as models for studies
of human nAChR.[17,20] These cell lines are from human tumors
and hence are immortalized. Thus, they can be propagated to
achieve almost any experimental end. They can be used for
pharmacological studies to define nAChR subtypes based on their
drug-binding properties gleaned from radioligand binding or
functional studies. Some of these cell lines, such as
rhabdomyosarcomas and peripheral neuroblastomas, naturally express
the same nAChR subtypes found in analogous, non-neoplastic tissues,
namely, muscle and autonomic neurons, respectively.
However, many important nAChR subtypes,
especially those expressed in central neurons, are not naturally
expressed by a known cell line. Consequently, we used
genetic-engineering techniques to create new cell lines that
heterologously express nAChR composed as combinations of specific
subunits. We have been most successful with the SH-EP1 human
epithelial cell line as a host for stable transfection with cDNAs
encoding select combinations of nAChR subunits. This line does not
naturally express any nAChR subunits or subtypes. Stably
transfected SH-EP1 cells thus represent a complement to the frog
oocyte system for heterologous expression of nAChR subtypes of
interest.
Using these cells, we can help define the
realm of possibilities for nAChR subunit composition.
Information gleaned from this work expedites determination of the
makeup of naturally expressed nAChR subtypes. We also can
define the functional and ligand-binding pharmacological profiles
of specific nAChR subtypes. The profiles provide a means of
discriminating between nAChR subtypes when they are naturally
expressed. They are also a resource for identifying and
refining nAChR subtype-specific (in absolute terms) or
subtype-selective (compared to interactions with other nAChR
subtypes) drugs that can be used for research or as prototypes for
clinical and medicinal use. For example, we have helped to
define the selectivity of dihydro-beta-erythroidine for human alpha
4 beta 2- over alpha 3*-nAChR and of methyllycaconitine for alpha
7-nAChR.[2,21,35]
In site-directed mutagenesis studies, cDNA
mutations are created to produce nAChR subunit proteins with
altered amino acids or interest. In chimeric receptor
studies, cDNAs are engineered to allow strings of amino acids to be
altered. Such studies have been used to define
structure-function relationships and as models for disease.
For example, chimeric studies have revealed unexpected roles of
nested cytoplasmic loop sequences in alpha 4 beta 2-nAChR function
and essential roles for proximal cytoplasmic loop sequences for
expression of alpha 4beta 2-nAChR on the cell surface.[9]
The numbers of nAChR in the brains of patients
with Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s disease are lower than
in the brains of age-matched controls. In Alzheimer's disease
those losses precede all other hallmarks of the disease.[27]
The incidence of Parkinson's disease in smokers is 50% less than it
is in nonsmokers. In animal, tissue slice, or cell-culture
models, nicotine exposure can protect against the neurotoxic
effects of beta-amyloid, a suspected etiopathogenic agent in
Alzheimer's disease. It also protects against the effects of
MPTP, a recreational drug that causes Parkinson's-like symptoms in
users. Moreover, nicotine is useful as a procognitive drug in
patients with Alzheimer's or dementia related to Parkinson's
disease.
Neurons that stain positively for
immunoreactive nAChR subunits in control postmortem human brains
are lost in Alzheimer's disease. Instead, the senile plaques
and neurofibrillary tangles associated with later-stage Alzheimer's
disease stain for nAChR subunits. These findings may imply
defects in the trafficking of nAChR at some stage of the
disease.[31] Serendipitously, we also noted nAChR
subunit-like immunoreactivity in the brain microvasculature, which
has stimulated work along those lines. Furthermore, at the
concentrations found in diseased brains, beta-amyloid can act
acutely to inhibit the functional responses of nAChR to nicotine or
ACh. This finding suggests a possible etiopathogenic role for
receptor block in disease onset, progression, or both.[34]
An improved understanding of the effects of
chronic nicotine exposure on brain and body function is relevant to
smoking behavior and public policy to help control or end the
behavior. However, it is also relevant to the prospective
medicinal use of nicotinic drugs. A subset of the American
adult population is chemically dependent on nicotine. A much
larger proportion of the adult populations in the Pacific rim and
eastern Europe in particular are likewise dependent. This
dependence drives smoking and other tobacco-use behaviors. It
is likely that interactions at nAChR contribute prominently to
nicotine dependence.
Our work using cell line models indicates that
every nAChR subtype tested to date becomes initially activated when
transiently exposed to nicotine.[6] However, sustained
exposure leads to inactivation of function through an apparent
series of processes called "desensitization" and "persistent
inactivation." These effects occur with nicotine
concentration and time-of-exposure dependencies that differ for
each nAChR subtype. However, upon persistent exposure to
nicotine at concentrations like those found in the plasma of
smokers, numerically abundant alpha 4 beta 2-nAChR function to only
50% of their capacity.[7]
Thus, we hypothesize that smokers learn to
self-administer nicotine to levels that produce a certain level of
nAChR functional blockade. In this regard, nicotine is far
different from drugs of abuse such as cocaine or heroin or
amphetamine, which are delivered in a way to stimulate their
targets. Our findings also suggest that drugs that partially
block or only partially stimulate select nAChR subtypes would have
physiological consequences similar to those associated with the use
of tobacco products and recreational nicotine. Such drugs
might serve as effective substitutes for smoking.
That idea is supported by the success of
smoking cessation clinics based on the use of bupropion
(Wellbutrin, GlaxoSmithKline, United Kingdom; Zyban,
GlaxoSmithKline, United Kingdom). When present at clinically
effective doses, this compound is an nAChR blocker.[5]
Nicotine-mecamylamine treatment[26] also would produce an
nAChR-selective block. The recent announcement of the
development of varenicline as a new aid to smoking cessation
underscores this idea. This drug is a "partial agonist" (an
agent that partially activates) selective for human
a4b2-nAChR.[28]
As many as 90% of schizophrenics are
smokers.[11,12] These individuals tend to report that their
moments of tranquility occur during smoking. We have
conducted studies indicating that a number of clinically useful
antipsychotic drugs inhibit the function of nAChR at medically
achieved concentrations. These findings again support the
idea that inhibition of nAChR function by nicotine exposure is
central to the self-medicating effects of tobacco
products.[22] Roles for nAChR in normal functions affected in
psychosis also are suggested.
About 90% of alcoholics are smokers.
There are suggestions that hangovers and loss of cognitive function
are moderated by such nicotine exposure, but the relationships
between the effects of nicotine and ethanol remain elusive.
Recent epidemiological studies suggest that
the risk for smoking behavior in teens is modest for offspring of
smoking parents, slightly higher for siblings of smokers, but
higher yet for individuals whose peers smoke.[32] Individuals
with a history of depression or anxiety have an even higher risk
for smoking.[32] A history of attention deficit problems is
associated with the highest risk of smoking.[32] Some users
report that nicotine stimulates them, whereas others report that
nicotine calms them. These reports are not contradictory when
it is realized that nicotine is a state-dependent mood stabilizer
that calms those who are anxious and elevates moods in those who
are depressed.[29]
We postulate that individuals who are
susceptible to nicotine dependence have heightened nicotinic
cholinergic signaling, which is perhaps associated with mood
instability and attentional difficulties.[6] As nicotine
exposure begins to lower nAChR activity and their hyperactive
nicotinic cholinergic signaling is dampened, such individuals may
begin to sense (probably subconsciously) their more balanced mood
and their enhanced attentional and consequent cognitive
performance. Our studies suggesting that tobacco use
represents self-medication to treat underlying emotional and
cognitive problems are supported not only by the risk studies
mentioned above, but also by data indicating that about 40% of
adult smokers in the United States are currently being or recently
have been treated for depression, anxiety, or attentional
problems.[11] What if the rest of the smokers also had the
same issues, but subclinically? Or what if they have assumed
life styles that keep them out of clinics? Our work showing
that various antidepressants block the function of nAChR subtypes
supports the "nicotine self-medication to produce nAChR
inactivation" hypothesis.[4]
Collectively, our studies lead us to suggest
that smoking cessation will be successful when nicotine dependence
is treated successfully (e.g., by providing enough nicotine through
patches or other devices to yield blood and brain levels equal to
those achieved by the individual while smoking). However, success
in smoking cessation also requires treatment of underlying
psychiatric issues.
Myasthenia gravis is a neuromuscular disease
caused by an autoimmune response against muscle-type nAChR.
The mechanism was discovered serendipitously when scientists sought
to generate antibodies against electric fish nAChR. They
found that the inoculated rabbits developed a characteristic,
flaccid paralysis that was reversible with conventional
anticholinesterase therapy.[25] Other myasthenic syndromes
are caused by specific mutations in muscle-type nAChR
subunits.[14] Similarly, some forms of idiopathic epilepsy
are caused, not by defects in inhibitory chemical
neurotransmission, but by mutations in brain nAChR subunits.
This is another arena where heterologous expression studies and
site-directed mutagenesis work are providing insight into disease
states. Serendipity also intervened in observations that
nicotine exposure lowered the frequency of tics in children who
were depressed and suffering from Tourette's syndrome, thus
providing insights into roles of nAChR in that behavioral
disorder.[30] Autoimmune reactivity and mutations in nAChR
subunits found in keratinocytes and perhaps other skin cell types
also have been implicated in the skin disorder,
acantholysis.[14]
We have extended our studies to other tissues
and organ systems, mostly through collaborations. We have
used our cell lines as models for the development and refinement of
techniques needed for histological studies; for the detection of
nAChR subunit messages, proteins, and binding sites at low levels;
and for localization of those entities with cellular or subcellular
resolution. These studies have concerned native nAChR in the
brain’s pleasure-reward centers relevant to nicotine
dependence and its effects on mood and emotion. Studies in
the spinal cord have focused on acute and chronic pain (one
compound from the skin of a type of South American frog has 100 to
1000 times more analgesic potency than morphine; rather than being
targeted at opioid receptors, it is a powerful activator of nAChR
function).
These studies have also involved nAChR and
their influences in the immune system. Organ cultures using
thymus from nonobese diabetic, severely combined immunodeficient
mice that lack hemopoietic components of the immune system
recombined with sources rich in those cells (e.g., mouse spleen or
liver or human umbilical cord blood cells) have been used to mimic
events in the early development of the immune system. We have
found widespread expression of nAChR in both stromal and
hemopoietic components of the cultures, that nicotine exposure
perturbs thymic signaling, and effects of prenatal nicotine
exposure on the fate of cord blood cells from smoking mother-fetus
pairs. These findings have implications for the effects of
nicotine exposure on the early development of the human immune
system.[10,24]
Conclusions
Collectively, this is a tale of discovery and insight concerning
nAChR, spun from studies of electric fish, a drug from the tobacco
plant, toxins from frogs and snakes, nAChR homologues from snails,
and the ingenuity of investigators riding the crest of waves of
technical development ranging from drug studies to recombinant DNA
and genetic engineering. It beautifully illustrates how
discoveries from diverse lines of investigation couple with
serendipity and interpretive imagination to reveal secrets of one
of nature's most intriguing and important class of molecules.
Now, gene knock-in and knock-outs, application of techniques such
as single ion-channel studies and creation of monoclonal
antibodies, and powers of combinatorial chemistry and intelligent
drug design are converging to provide tools and approaches that are
allowing nAChR to be studied, even when present at low levels and
in complex mixtures. This work is moving forward using a
variety of animal models as well as with regenerable and postmortem
human tissues. The findings are providing greater insights
into nAChR and their normal and pathophysiological roles.
Acknowledgments
Thanks are due to Dr. Robert D. Scavetta of the Mayo Clinic,
Scottsdale, for his timely work to generate the nAChR alpha 7
extracellular domain homology model so useful in visualizing
features of the entire class of molecules. The author also is
indebted to his colleagues in the Laboratory of Neurochemistry and
to many valued collaborators who have participated in the work
mentioned.
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