Structural Models of Ligand‐Gated Ion Channels: Sites of Action for Anesthetics and Ethanol |
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Authors: | Richard W. Olsen Guo‐Dong Li Martin Wallner James R. Trudell Edward J. Bertaccini Erik Lindahl Keith W. Miller Ronald L. Alkana Daryl L. Davies |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology , David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, , Los Angeles, California;2. Department of Anesthesiology , David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, , Los Angeles, California;3. Department of Anesthesia , Stanford University School of Medicine, , Stanford, California;4. KTH Royal Institute of Technology , , Stockholm, Sweden;5. Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care , Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, , Boston, Massachusetts;6. School of Pharmacy , University of Southern California, , Los Angeles, California |
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Abstract: | The molecular mechanism(s) of action of anesthetic, and especially, intoxicating doses of alcohol (ethanol [EtOH]) have been of interest even before the advent of the Research Society on Alcoholism. Recent physiological, genetic, and biochemical studies have pin‐pointed molecular targets for anesthetics and EtOH in the brain as ligand‐gated ion channel (LGIC) membrane proteins, especially the pentameric (5 subunit) Cys‐loop superfamily of neurotransmitter receptors including nicotinic acetylcholine (nAChRs), GABAA (GABAARs), and glycine receptors (GlyRs). The ability to demonstrate molecular and structural elements of these proteins critical for the behavioral effects of these drugs on animals and humans provides convincing evidence for their role in the drugs' actions. Amino acid residues necessary for pharmacologically relevant allosteric modulation of LGIC function by anesthetics and EtOH have been identified in these channel proteins. Site‐directed mutagenesis revealed potential allosteric modulatory sites in both the trans‐membrane domain (TMD) and extracellular domain (ECD). Potential sites of action and binding have been deduced from homology modeling of other LGICs with structures known from crystallography and cryo‐electron microscopy studies. Direct information about ligand binding in the TMD has been obtained by photoaffinity labeling, especially in GABAARs. Recent structural information from crystallized procaryotic (ELIC and GLIC) and eukaryotic (GluCl) LGICs allows refinement of the structural models including evaluation of possible sites of EtOH action. |
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Keywords: | GABAA Receptors GluCl Pentameric Ion Channels
ELIC
GLIC
Loop 2 Ethanol Sites of Action |
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