Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC)

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Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC). / Madjroh, Nawid; Mellou, Eleni ; Æbelø, Laura; Davies, Paul A.; Söderhielm, Pella Cecilia; Jensen, Anders A.

In: Biochemical Pharmacology, Vol. 193, 114781, 2021.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Madjroh, N, Mellou, E, Æbelø, L, Davies, PA, Söderhielm, PC & Jensen, AA 2021, 'Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC)', Biochemical Pharmacology, vol. 193, 114781. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114781

APA

Madjroh, N., Mellou, E., Æbelø, L., Davies, P. A., Söderhielm, P. C., & Jensen, A. A. (2021). Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC). Biochemical Pharmacology, 193, [114781]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114781

Vancouver

Madjroh N, Mellou E, Æbelø L, Davies PA, Söderhielm PC, Jensen AA. Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC). Biochemical Pharmacology. 2021;193. 114781. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114781

Author

Madjroh, Nawid ; Mellou, Eleni ; Æbelø, Laura ; Davies, Paul A. ; Söderhielm, Pella Cecilia ; Jensen, Anders A. / Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC). In: Biochemical Pharmacology. 2021 ; Vol. 193.

Bibtex

@article{08afb2c0ed1f42e5ab80d7e7eecc37fb,
title = "Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC)",
abstract = "The molecular basis for the signal transduction through the classical Cys-loop receptors (CLRs) has been delineated in great detail. The Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC) constitutes a so far poorly elucidated fifth branch of the CLR superfamily, and in this study we explore the molecular mechanisms underlying ZAC signaling in Xenopus oocytes by two-electrode voltage clamp electrophysiology. In studies of chimeric receptors fusing either the extracellular domain (ECD) or the transmembrane/intracellular domain (TMD-ICD) of ZAC with the complementary domains of 5-HT3A serotonin or α1 glycine receptors, serotonin and Zn2+/H+ evoked robust concentration-dependent currents in 5-HT3A/ZAC- and ZAC/α1-Gly-expressing oocytes, respectively, suggesting that Zn2+ and protons activate ZAC predominantly through its ECD. The molecular basis for Zn2+-mediated ZAC signaling was probed further by introduction of mutations of His, Cys, Glu and Asp residues in this domain, but as none of the mutants tested displayed substantially impaired Zn2+ functionality compared to wild-type ZAC, the location of the putative Zn2+ binding site(s) in the ECD was not identified. Finally, the functional importance of Leu246 (Leu9′) in the transmembrane M2 α-helix of ZAC was investigated by Ala, Val, Ile and Thr substitutions. In concordance with findings for this highly conserved residue in classical CLRs, the ZACL9′X mutants exhibited left-shifted agonist concentration-response relationships, markedly higher degrees of spontaneous activity and slower desensitization kinetics compared to wild-type ZAC. In conclusion, while ZAC is an atypical CLR in terms of its (identified) agonists and channel characteristics, its signal transduction seems to undergo similar conformational transitions as those in the classical CLR.",
author = "Nawid Madjroh and Eleni Mellou and Laura {\AE}bel{\o} and Davies, {Paul A.} and S{\"o}derhielm, {Pella Cecilia} and Jensen, {Anders A.}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114781",
language = "English",
volume = "193",
journal = "Biochemical Pharmacology",
issn = "0006-2952",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Probing the molecular basis for signal transduction through the Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC)

AU - Madjroh, Nawid

AU - Mellou, Eleni

AU - Æbelø, Laura

AU - Davies, Paul A.

AU - Söderhielm, Pella Cecilia

AU - Jensen, Anders A.

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - The molecular basis for the signal transduction through the classical Cys-loop receptors (CLRs) has been delineated in great detail. The Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC) constitutes a so far poorly elucidated fifth branch of the CLR superfamily, and in this study we explore the molecular mechanisms underlying ZAC signaling in Xenopus oocytes by two-electrode voltage clamp electrophysiology. In studies of chimeric receptors fusing either the extracellular domain (ECD) or the transmembrane/intracellular domain (TMD-ICD) of ZAC with the complementary domains of 5-HT3A serotonin or α1 glycine receptors, serotonin and Zn2+/H+ evoked robust concentration-dependent currents in 5-HT3A/ZAC- and ZAC/α1-Gly-expressing oocytes, respectively, suggesting that Zn2+ and protons activate ZAC predominantly through its ECD. The molecular basis for Zn2+-mediated ZAC signaling was probed further by introduction of mutations of His, Cys, Glu and Asp residues in this domain, but as none of the mutants tested displayed substantially impaired Zn2+ functionality compared to wild-type ZAC, the location of the putative Zn2+ binding site(s) in the ECD was not identified. Finally, the functional importance of Leu246 (Leu9′) in the transmembrane M2 α-helix of ZAC was investigated by Ala, Val, Ile and Thr substitutions. In concordance with findings for this highly conserved residue in classical CLRs, the ZACL9′X mutants exhibited left-shifted agonist concentration-response relationships, markedly higher degrees of spontaneous activity and slower desensitization kinetics compared to wild-type ZAC. In conclusion, while ZAC is an atypical CLR in terms of its (identified) agonists and channel characteristics, its signal transduction seems to undergo similar conformational transitions as those in the classical CLR.

AB - The molecular basis for the signal transduction through the classical Cys-loop receptors (CLRs) has been delineated in great detail. The Zinc-Activated Channel (ZAC) constitutes a so far poorly elucidated fifth branch of the CLR superfamily, and in this study we explore the molecular mechanisms underlying ZAC signaling in Xenopus oocytes by two-electrode voltage clamp electrophysiology. In studies of chimeric receptors fusing either the extracellular domain (ECD) or the transmembrane/intracellular domain (TMD-ICD) of ZAC with the complementary domains of 5-HT3A serotonin or α1 glycine receptors, serotonin and Zn2+/H+ evoked robust concentration-dependent currents in 5-HT3A/ZAC- and ZAC/α1-Gly-expressing oocytes, respectively, suggesting that Zn2+ and protons activate ZAC predominantly through its ECD. The molecular basis for Zn2+-mediated ZAC signaling was probed further by introduction of mutations of His, Cys, Glu and Asp residues in this domain, but as none of the mutants tested displayed substantially impaired Zn2+ functionality compared to wild-type ZAC, the location of the putative Zn2+ binding site(s) in the ECD was not identified. Finally, the functional importance of Leu246 (Leu9′) in the transmembrane M2 α-helix of ZAC was investigated by Ala, Val, Ile and Thr substitutions. In concordance with findings for this highly conserved residue in classical CLRs, the ZACL9′X mutants exhibited left-shifted agonist concentration-response relationships, markedly higher degrees of spontaneous activity and slower desensitization kinetics compared to wild-type ZAC. In conclusion, while ZAC is an atypical CLR in terms of its (identified) agonists and channel characteristics, its signal transduction seems to undergo similar conformational transitions as those in the classical CLR.

U2 - 10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114781

DO - 10.1016/j.bcp.2021.114781

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34560053

VL - 193

JO - Biochemical Pharmacology

JF - Biochemical Pharmacology

SN - 0006-2952

M1 - 114781

ER -

ID: 279649137