scholarly journals Cytoplasmic components of acetylcholine receptor clusters of cultured rat myotubes: the 58-kD protein.

1991 ◽  
Vol 115 (2) ◽  
pp. 435-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
R J Bloch ◽  
W G Resneck ◽  
A O'Neill ◽  
J Strong ◽  
D W Pumplin

A 58-kD protein, identified in extracts of postsynaptic membrane from Torpedo electric organ, is enriched at sites where acetylcholine receptors (AChR) are concentrated in vertebrate muscle (Froehner, S. C., A. A. Murnane, M. Tobler, H. B. Peng, and R. Sealock. 1987. J. Cell Biol. 104:1633-1646). We have studied the 58-kD protein in AChR clusters isolated from cultured rat myotubes. Using immunofluorescence microscopy we show that the 58-kD protein is highly enriched at AChR clusters, but is also present in regions of the myotube membrane lacking AChR. Within clusters, the 58-kD protein codistributes with AChR, and is absent from adjacent membrane domains involved in myotube-substrate contact. Semiquantitative fluorescence measurements suggest that molecules of the 58-kD protein and AChR are present in approximately equal numbers. Differential extraction of peripheral membrane proteins from isolated AChR clusters suggests that the 58-kD protein is more tightly bound to cluster membrane than is actin or spectrin, but less tightly bound than the receptor-associated 43-kD protein. When AChR clusters are disrupted either in intact cells or after isolation, the 58-kD protein still codistributes with AChR. Clusters visualized by electron microscopy after immunogold labeling and quick-freeze, deep-etch replication show that, within AChR clusters, the 58-kD protein is sharply confined to AChR-rich domains, where it is present in a network of filaments lying on the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane. Additional actin filaments overlie, and are attached to, this network. Our results suggest that within AChR domains of clusters, the 58-kD protein lies between AChR and the receptor-associated 43-kD protein, and the membrane-skeletal proteins, beta-spectrin, and actin.

1987 ◽  
Vol 104 (4) ◽  
pp. 939-946 ◽  
Author(s):  
ML Woodruff ◽  
J Theriot ◽  
SJ Burden

Acetylcholine receptor-rich membranes from the electric organ of Torpedo californica are enriched in the four different subunits of the acetylcholine receptor and in two peripheral membrane proteins at 43 and 300 kD. We produced monoclonal antibodies against the 300-kD protein and have used these antibodies to determine the location of the protein, both in the electric organ and in skeletal muscle. Antibodies to the 300-kD protein were characterized by Western blots, binding assays to isolated membranes, and immunofluorescence on tissue. In Torpedo electric organ, antibodies to the 300-kD protein stain only the innervated face of the electrocytes. The 300-kD protein is on the intracellular surface of the postsynaptic membrane, since antibodies to the 300-kD protein bind more efficiently to saponin-permeabilized, right side out membranes than to intact membranes. Some antibodies against the Torpedo 300-kD protein cross-react with amphibian and mammalian neuromuscular synapses, and the cross-reacting protein is also highly concentrated on the intracellular surface of the post-synaptic membrane.


1989 ◽  
Vol 109 (4) ◽  
pp. 1753-1764 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Carr ◽  
G D Fischbach ◽  
J B Cohen

To identify proteins associated with nicotinic postsynaptic membranes, mAbs have been prepared to proteins extracted by alkaline pH or lithium diiodosalicylate from acetylcholine receptor-rich (AChR) membranes of Torpedo electric organ. Antibodies were obtained that recognized two novel proteins of 87,000 Mr and a 210,000:220,000 doublet as well as previously described proteins of 43,000 Mr, 58,000 (51,000 in our gel system), 270,000, and 37,000 (calelectrin). The 87-kD protein copurified with acetylcholine receptors and with 43- and 51-kD proteins during equilibrium centrifugation on continuous sucrose gradients, whereas a large fraction of the 210/220-kD protein was separated from AChRs. The 87-kD protein remained associated with receptors and 43-kD protein during velocity sedimentation through shallow sucrose gradients, a procedure that separated a significant amount of 51-kD protein from AChRs. The 87- and 270-kD proteins were cleaved by Ca++-activated proteases present in crude preparations and also in highly purified postsynaptic membranes. With the exception of anti-37-kD antibodies, some of the monoclonals raised against Torpedo proteins also recognized determinants in frozen sections of chick and/or rat skeletal muscle fibers and in permeabilized chick myotubes grown in vitro. Anti-87-kD sites were concentrated at chick and rat endplates, but the antibodies also recognized determinants present at lower site density in the extrasynaptic membrane. Anti-210:220-kD labeled chick endplates, but studies of neuron-myotube cocultures showed that this antigen was located on neurites rather than the postsynaptic membrane. As reported in other species, 43-kD determinants were restricted to chick endplates and anti-51-kD and anti-270-kD labeled extrasynaptic as well as synaptic membranes. None of the cross reacting antibodies recognized determinants on intact (unpermeabilized) myotubes, so the antigens must be located on the cytoplasmic aspect of the surface membrane. The role that each intracellular determinant plays in AChR immobilization at developing and mature endplates remains to be investigated.


1985 ◽  
Vol 100 (5) ◽  
pp. 1698-1705 ◽  
Author(s):  
H B Peng ◽  
S C Froehner

The postsynaptic membrane from Torpedo electric organ contains, in addition to the acetylcholine receptor (AChR), a major peripheral membrane protein of approximately 43,000 mol wt (43K protein). Previous studies have shown that this protein is closely associated with AChR and may be involved in anchoring receptors to the postsynaptic membrane. In this study, binding sites for monoclonal antibodies (mabs) to the 43K protein have been compared to the distribution of AChR in Xenopus laevis muscle cells in culture. In double label immunofluorescence experiments, clusters of AChR that occur spontaneously on these cells were stained with anti-43K mabs. Newly formed receptor clusters induced with positive polypeptide-coated latex beads were also stained with anti-43K mabs as early as 12 h after the application of the beads. Exact correspondence in the distribution of the anti-43K protein binding sites and the AChR was found in both types of clusters. These results suggest that the 43K protein becomes associated with AChR clusters during a period of active postsynaptic membrane differentiation. Thus, this protein may participate in the clustering process.


1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 615-627 ◽  
Author(s):  
E W Godfrey ◽  
R M Nitkin ◽  
B G Wallace ◽  
L L Rubin ◽  
U J McMahan

The synaptic portion of a muscle fiber's basal lamina sheath has molecules tightly bound to it that cause aggregation of acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) on regenerating myofibers. Since basal lamina and other extracellular matrix constituents are insoluble in isotonic saline and detergent solutions, insoluble detergent-extracted fractions of tissues receiving cholinergic input may provide an enriched source of the AChR-aggregating molecules for detailed characterization. Here we demonstrate that such an insoluble fraction from Torpedo electric organ, a tissue with a high concentration of cholinergic synapses, causes AChRs on cultured chick muscle cells to aggregate. We have partially characterized the insoluble fraction, examined the response of muscle cells to it, and devised ways of extracting the active components with a view toward purifying them and learning whether they are similar to those in the basal lamina at the neuromuscular junction. The insoluble fraction from the electric organ was rich in extracellular matrix constituents; it contained structures resembling basal lamina sheaths and had a high density of collagen fibrils. It caused a 3- to 20-fold increase in the number of AChR clusters on cultured myotubes without significantly affecting the number or size of the myotubes. The increase was first seen 2-4 h after the fraction was added to cultures and it was maximal by 24 h. The AChR-aggregating effect was dose dependent and was due, at least in part, to lateral migration of AChRs present in the muscle cell plasma membrane at the time the fraction was applied. Activity was destroyed by heat and by trypsin. The active component(s) was extracted from the insoluble fraction with high ionic strength or pH 5.5 buffers. The extracts increased the number of AChR clusters on cultured myotubes without affecting the number or degradation rate of surface AChRs. Antiserum against the solubilized material blocked its effect on AChR distribution and bound to the active component. Insoluble fractions of Torpedo muscle and liver did not cause AChR aggregation on cultured myotubes. However a low level of activity was detected in pH 5.5 extracts from the muscle fraction. The active component(s) in the muscle extract was immunoprecipitated by the antiserum against the material extracted from the electric organ insoluble fraction. This antiserum also bound to extracellular matrix in frog muscles, including the myofiber basal lamina sheath. Thus the insoluble fraction of Torpedo electric organ is rich in AChR-aggregating molecules that are also found in muscle and has components antigenically similar to those in myofiber basal lamina.


1986 ◽  
Vol 103 (2) ◽  
pp. 493-507 ◽  
Author(s):  
T B Usdin ◽  
G D Fischbach

Acetylcholine receptors (AChRs) are packed in the postsynaptic membrane at neuromuscular junctions at a density of approximately 20,000/micron 2, whereas the density a few micrometers away is less than 20/micron 2. To understand how this remarkable distribution comes about during nerve-muscle synapse formation, we have attempted to isolate factors from neural tissue that can promote the accumulation of AChRs and/or alter their distribution. In this paper we report the purification of a polypeptide from chick brains that can increase the rate of insertion of AChR into membranes of cultured chick myotubes at a concentration of less than 0.5 ng/ml. Based on SDS PAGE and the action of neuraminidase, the acetylcholine receptor-inducing activity (ARIA) appears to be a 42,000-D glycoprotein. ARIA was extracted in a trifluoroacetic acid-containing cocktail and purified to homogeneity by reverse-phase, ion exchange, and size exclusion high pressure liquid chromatography. Dose response curves indicate that the activity has been purified 60,000-fold compared with the starting acid extract and approximately 1,500,000-fold compared with a saline extract prepared from the same batch of brains. Although the ARIA was purified on the basis of its ability to increase receptor incorporation, we found that it increased the number and size of receptor clusters as well. It is not yet clear if the two effects are independent. The 42-kD ARIA is extremely stable: it was not destroyed by exposure to intact myotubes, low pH, organic solvents, or SDS. Its action appears to be selective in that the increase in the rate of receptor insertion was not accompanied by an increase in the rate of protein synthesis. Moreover, there was no change in cellular, surface membrane, or secreted acetylcholinesterase. The effect of ARIA is apparently independent of the state of activity of the target myotubes as its effect on receptor incorporation added to that of maximal concentrations of tetrodotoxin.


1982 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
P A St John ◽  
S C Froehner ◽  
D A Goodenough ◽  
J B Cohen

Experiments were conducted to examine the topographic arrangement of the polypeptides of the acetylcholine receptor (AcChR) and the nonreceptor Mr 43,000 protein in postsynaptic membranes isolated from Torpedo electric organ. When examined by electron microscopy, greater than 85% of vesicles were not permeable to ferritin or lactoperoxidase (LPO). Exposure to saponin was identified as a suitable procedure to permeabilize the vesicles to macromolecules with minimal alteration of vesicle size or ultrastructure. The sidedness of vesicles was examined morphologically and biochemically. Comparison of the distribution of intramembrane particles on freeze-fractured vesicles and the distribution found in situ indicated that greater than 85% of the vesicles were extracellular-side out. Vesicles labeled with alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-Bgtx) were reacted with antibodies against alpha-BgTx or against purified AcChR of Torpedo. Bound antibodies were detected by the use of ferritin-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibody and were located on the outside of greater than 99% of labeled vesicles. Similar results were obtained for normal vesicles or vesicles exposed to saponin. Quantification of the amount of [3H]-alpha-BgTx bound to vesicles before and after they were made permeable with saponin indicated that less than 5% of alpha-BgTx binding sites were cryptic in normal vesicles. It was concluded that greater than 95% of postsynaptic membranes were oriented extracellular-side out. LPO-catalyzed radioiodinations were performed on normal and saponin-treated vesicles and on vesicles from which the Mr (relative molecular mass) 43,000 protein had been removed by alkaline extraction. In normal vesicles, polypeptides of the AcChR were iodinated while the Mr 43,000 protein was not. In vesicles made permeable with saponin, the pattern of labeling of AcChR polypeptides was unchanged, but the Mr 43,000 protein was heavily iodinated. The relative iodination of AcChR polypeptides was unchanged in membranes equilibrated with agonist or with alpha-BgTx or after alkaline-extraction. It was concluded that the Mr 43,000 protein is present on the intracellular surface of the postsynaptic membrane and that AcChR polypeptides are exposed on the extracellular surface.


1986 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
pp. 1399-1403 ◽  
Author(s):  
M M Salpeter ◽  
D L Cooper ◽  
T Levitt-Gilmour

Denervation of vertebrate muscle causes an acceleration of acetylcholine receptor turnover at the neuromuscular junction. This acceleration reflects the composite behavior of two populations of receptors: "original receptors" present at the junction at the time of denervation, and "new receptors" inserted into the denervated junction to replace the original receptors as they are degraded (Levitt, T. A., and M. M. Salpeter, 1981, Nature (Lond.), 291:239-241). The present study examined the degradation rate of original receptors to determine whether reinnervation could reverse the effect of denervation. Sternomastoid muscles in adult mice were denervated by either cutting or crushing the nerve, and the nerves either allowed to regenerate or ligated to prevent regeneration. The original receptors were labeled with 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin at the time of denervation, and their degradation rate followed by gamma counting. We found that when the nerve was not allowed to regenerate, the degradation decreased from a t1/2 of approximately 8-10 d to one of approximately 3 d (as reported earlier for denervated original receptors) and remained at that half-life throughout the experiment (approximately 36 d). If the axons were allowed to regenerate (which occurred asynchronously between day 14 and day 30 after nerve cut and between day 7 and 13 after nerve crush), the accelerated degradation rate of the original receptors reverted to a t1/2 of approximately 8 d. Our data lead us to conclude that the effect of denervation on the degradation rate of original receptors can be reversed by reinnervating. The nerve can thus slow the degradation rate of receptors previously inserted into the postsynaptic membrane.


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