NMR resolved multiple anesthetic binding sites in the TM domains of the α4β2 nAChR

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Abstract

The α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) has significant roles in nervous system function and disease. It is also a molecular target of general anesthetics. Anesthetics inhibit the α4β2 nAChR at clinically relevant concentrations, but their binding sites in α4β2 remain unclear. The recently determined NMR structures of the α4β2 nAChR transmembrane (TM) domains provide valuable frameworks for identifying the binding sites. In this study, we performed solution NMR experiments on the α4β2 TM domains in the absence and presence of halothane and ketamine. Both anesthetics were found in an intra-subunit cavity near the extracellular end of the β2 transmembrane helices, homologous to a common anesthetic binding site observed in X-ray structures of anesthetic-bound GLIC (Nury et al., [32]). Halothane, but not ketamine, was also found in cavities adjacent to the common anesthetic site at the interface of α4 and β2. In addition, both anesthetics bound to cavities near the ion selectivity filter at the intracellular end of the TM domains. Anesthetic binding induced profound changes in protein conformational exchanges. A number of residues, close to or remote from the binding sites, showed resonance signal splitting from single to double peaks, signifying that anesthetics decreased conformation exchange rates. It was also evident that anesthetics shifted population of two conformations. Altogether, the study comprehensively resolved anesthetic binding sites in the α4β2 nAChR. Furthermore, the study provided compelling experimental evidence of anesthetic-induced changes in protein dynamics, especially near regions of the hydrophobic gate and ion selectivity filter that directly regulate channel functions.

Graphical abstract

Highlights

► Anesthetics halothane and ketamine bound to multiple sites of the α4β2 nAChR. ► A common intra-subunit anesthetic site was near the extracellular end of the β2 TM. ► Halothane occupied inter-subunit sites near the extracellular end of the TM domain. ► Both drugs bound to intra- and inter-subunit sites near the selectivity filter. ► Anesthetics induced, directly or allosterically, dynamics changes of α4β2.

Keywords

Halothane
Ketamine
General anesthetic
NMR
α4β2 nAChR
Protein dynamic

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Both authors contributed equally to the work.