Localization of the receptor site for alpha-scorpion toxins by antibody mapping: implications for sodium channel topology.

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RESUMO

Site-directed and monoclonal antibodies recognizing different extracellular regions of the RII sodium channel alpha subunit have been used to determine the sequences that comprise the receptor for alpha-scorpion toxins by evaluating the effect of antibody on voltage-dependent binding of radio-labeled toxin isolated from Leiurus quinquestriatus to both reconstituted rat brain sodium channel and rat brain synaptosomes. Of six antibodies tested, two recognizing amino acid residues 355-371 and 382-400 located on an extracellular loop between transmembrane segments S5 and S6 of domain I and one recognizing residues 1686-1703 of a similar loop of domain IV inhibit binding by 30-55%. Inhibition is concentration-(EC50 = 0.4-2 microM) and time- (t1/2 = 40-80 min) dependent. Five different monoclonal antibodies recognizing the same extracellular loop in domain I inhibit binding completely with similar EC50 values as observed for site-directed antibodies. Kinetic studies of the antibody effect are consistent with a slowly reversible competition for the toxin receptor site. Our results suggest that the extracellular loops between segments S5 and S6 of domains I and IV comprise at least part of the alpha-scorpion toxin receptor site and support the membrane topology models in which domains I and IV are adjacent in the tertiary structure of the channel protein and six transmembrane sequences are contained in each of the four homologous domains.

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