Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5814857 | Neuropharmacology | 2014 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
We found that hP2X2 receptors are potently inhibited by copper (IC50Â =Â 40Â nM). ATP responsiveness recovered extremely slowly after copper washout, with full recovery requiring over 1Â h. ATP binding facilitated copper binding but not unbinding from this inhibitory site. A mutant receptor in which the first six extracellular cysteines were deleted, C(1-6)S, showed normal copper inhibition, however reducing agents dramatically accelerated recovery from copper inhibition in wild type hP2X2 and the C(1-6)S mutant, indicating that the final two disulfide bonds are required to maintain the high affinity copper binding site. Three histidine residues required for normal zinc inhibition were also required for normal copper inhibition. Humans with untreated Wilson's disease have excess amounts of copper in the brain. The high copper sensitivity of hP2X2 receptors suggests that they are non-functional in these patients.
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Authors
Sukanya Punthambaker, Richard I. Hume,