Protein Information

ID 291
Name glycine receptors (protein family or complex)
Synonyms Glycine receptor; Glycine receptors

Compound Information

ID 336
Name strychnine
CAS strychnidin-10-one

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
9490812 Lewis TM, Sivilotti LG, Colquhoun D, Gardiner RM, Schoepfer R, Rees M: Properties of human glycine receptors containing the hyperekplexia mutation alpha1 (K276E), expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Neurochem Int. 2004 Jun;44(7):521-7.
1. Inherited defects in human glycine receptors give rise to hyperekplexia (startle disease). We expressed human glycine receptors in Xenopus oocytes, in order to examine the pharmacological and single-channel properties of receptors that contain a mutation, alpha1 (K276E), associated with an atypical form of hyperekplexia. 2. Equilibrium concentration-response curves showed that recombinant human alpha1 (K276E) beta receptors had a 29-fold lower glycine sensitivity than wild-type alpha1beta receptors, and a greatly reduced Hill coefficient. The maximum response to glycine also appeared much reduced, whereas the equilibrium constant for the glycine receptor antagonist strychnine was unchanged. 3. Both wild-type and mutant channels opened to multiple conductance levels with similar main conductance levels (33 pS) and weighted mean conductances (41.5 versus 49.8 pS, respectively). 4. Channel openings were shorter for the alpha1 (K276E) beta mutant than for the wild-type alpha1beta, with mean overall apparent open times of 0.82 and 6.85 ms, respectively. 5. The main effect of the alpha1 (K276E) mutation is to impair the opening of the channel rather than the binding of glycine. This is shown by the results of fitting glycine dose-response curves with particular postulated mechanisms, the shorter open times of mutant channels, the properties of single-channel bursts, and the lack of an effect of the mutation on the strychnine-binding site.
34(0,1,1,4)