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Volume 16, Number 9,
Issue of May 1, 1996
pp. 2869-2880
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Structure and Pharmacological Properties of a Molluscan
Glutamate-Gated Cation Channel and its Likely Role in Feeding
Behavior
Thorsten Stühmer1,
Muriel Amar1, 2,
Robert J. Harvey1,
Isabel Bermudez2,
Jan van
Minnen3, and
Mark G. Darlison1
1 Institut für Zellbiochemie und Klinische
Neurobiologie, Universitäts-Krankenhaus Eppendorf,
Universität Hamburg, 20246 Hamburg, Germany, 2 School
of Biological and Molecular Sciences, Oxford Brookes University,
Headington, Oxford OX3 0BP, United Kingdom, and
3 Department of Organismic Zoology, Vrije Universiteit,
1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
We describe the isolation of a molluscan (Lymnaea
stagnalis) full-length complementary DNA that encodes a mature
polypeptide (which we have named Lym-eGluR2) with a predicted molecular
weight of 105 kDa that exhibits 44-48% identity to the mammalian
kainate-selective glutamate receptor GluR5, GluR6, and GluR7 subunits.
Injection of in vitro-transcribed RNA from this clone into
Xenopus laevis oocytes results in the robust expression of
homo-oligomeric cation channels that can be gated by
L-glutamate (EC50 = 1.2 ± 0.3 µM) and several other glutamate
receptor agonists; rank order of potency: glutamate kainate > ibotenate > AMPA. These currents can be blocked by the mammalian
non-NMDA receptor antagonists 6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione,
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione, and
1-(4-chlorobenzoyl)piperazine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid. Ionic-replacement
experiments have shown that the agonist-induced current is carried
entirely by sodium and potassium ions. In situ hybridization
has revealed that the Lym-eGluR2 transcript is present in all 11 ganglia of the Lymnaea CNS, including the 4-cluster
motorneurons within the paired buccal ganglia. The pharmacological
properties and deduced location of Lym-eGluR2 are entirely consistent
with it being (a component of) the receptor, which has been identified
previously on buccal motorneurons, that mediates the excitatory effects
of glutamate released from neurons within the feeding central pattern
generator.
Key words:
buccal ganglion;
complementary DNA cloning;
feeding behavior;
in situ hybridization;
ion channel;
ionotropic glutamate receptor;
kainate receptor;
mollusc (Lymnaea
stagnalis);
Xenopus oocyte expression;
4-cluster
motorneurons
INTRODUCTION
Glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter that
is present in both vertebrate and invertebrate nervous systems. In the
mammalian CNS, this molecule mediates its depolarizing effects by
binding to ionotropic glutamate receptors (GluRs) and promoting the
influx of cations into the postsynaptic cell. In recent years,
molecular biological studies have revealed a plethora of GluR subunits
within the mammalian brain, and these have been distinguished
pharmacologically based on their agonist selectivity. To date, four
AMPA-selective subunits (GluR1-GluR4) (Hollmann et al., 1989 ;
Keinänen et al., 1990 ; Nakanishi et al., 1990 ; Sakimura et al.,
1990 ), five kainate-selective subunits (GluR5-GluR7 and KA-1 and KA-2)
(Bettler et al., 1990 , 1992 ; Egebjerg et al., 1991 ; Werner et al.,
1991 ; Herb et al., 1992 ; Lomeli et al., 1992 ; Morita et al., 1992 ;
Sakimura et al., 1992 ), five NMDA-selective subunits (NR1 and
NR2A-NR2D) (Moriyoshi et al., 1991 ; Ikeda et al., 1992 ; Kutsuwada et
al., 1992 ; Meguro et al., 1992 ; Monyer et al., 1992 ), and three
GluR-like polypeptides of unknown function ( 1, 2, and -1,
which is also called NMDAR-L) (Yamazaki et al., 1992 ; Lomeli et al.,
1993 ; Ciabarra et al., 1995 ; Sucher et al., 1995 ) have been identified.
This pharmacological classification reflects the extent of sequence
similarity seen between polypeptides, i.e., any two subunits having the
same agonist preference will display greater sequence identity than any
two subunits having different agonist selectivity.
In contrast to the situation for vertebrate GluRs, very little
has been published on the structures and functions of the corresponding
invertebrate channels. Three sequences have been described for
GluR-like polypeptides of Drosophila melanogaster; one of
these (DGluR-I) (Ultsch et al., 1992 ) most closely resembles mammalian
AMPA-selective subunits; the second (DGluR-II) (Schuster et al., 1991 )
is only weakly related to vertebrate ionotropic GluR sequences; and the
third (DNMDAR-I) (Ultsch et al., 1993 ) exhibits greatest identity to
the mammalian NR1 subunit. In addition, an AMPA receptor-like sequence
has been reported for the fresh-water mollusc Lymnaea
stagnalis (Hutton et al., 1991 ). However, when expressed in
Xenopus laevis oocytes, these polypeptides either do not
form functional ion channels (Hutton et al., 1991 ; Schuster et al.,
1991 ; Ultsch et al., 1992 , 1993 ) or do so only very inefficiently
(Ultsch et al., 1992 ).
We have performed a detailed molecular analysis of molluscan
glutamate-gated ion channels to investigate the relationship(s) between
specific receptors and well characterized patterns of behavior in which
glutamate is known to play a role (Quinlan and Murphy, 1991 ; Dale and
Kandel, 1993 ; Quinlan et al., 1995 ). Here we report on the functional
properties and location of an ionotropic GluR polypeptide from
Lymnaea that displays greatest sequence similarity to the
mammalian GluR5, GluR6, and GluR7 subunits. Taken together, our data
strongly implicate the molluscan polypeptide in the motorneuron control
of buccal muscle movement during feeding.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Isolation of a full-length Lym-eGluR2 complementary DNA.
A partial complementary DNA (cDNA) was obtained using the PCR and
the following degenerate oligonucleotide primers:
5 -GCG GT(C/G)(C/G)(C/G)GGA(C/T)GGXAA(A/G)TA(C/T)GG-3
(where X = G, A, T, and C), which is based on the DNA sequences that
encode a region amino-terminal of the first putative membrane-spanning
domain, TM1, (I/L)(A/E/S/T)IV(G/P/S)DGKYG (single-letter
amino-acid code), and
5 -GCC (A/G/T)ATXA(A/G)XGT(A/G)AA(A/G)AACCACCA-3 ,
which is based on the DNA sequences that encode part of the
second putative membrane-spanning domain (TM3) (Keinänen et al.,
1990 ; Hollmann et al., 1994 ), WWFFTLIIIS, of the mammalian
GluR1-GluR4 subunits. Lymnaea first-strand cDNA,
synthesized from adult nervous system total RNA using both random
hexamers and an oligo-dT17 primer, was used as
template. Amplification was for 40 cycles of 94°C for 1 min
(denaturation), 55°C for 1 min (annealing), and 72°C for 1 min
(extension). Products were cloned into M13mp18 (Boehringer Mannheim,
Mannheim, Germany), taking advantage of restriction endonuclease
recognition sites (underlined) incorporated into the PCR primers, and
sequenced.
Four different types of cDNA, encoding previously unidentified
GluR-like polypeptides, were obtained. One of these (provisionally
named clone #21) (Darlison et al., 1994 ) was used to screen 5 × 105 bacteriophage of an adult Lymnaea
CNS cDNA library (a gift from Dr. Erno Vreugdenhil, Vrije Universiteit,
Amsterdam), constructed in ZAPII, under conditions of high
stringency. Hybridization was in 6× SSC (1× SSC = 0.15 M NaCl, 0.015 M sodium
citrate, pH 7), 5× Denhardt's solution, 0.5% (w/v) SDS, 10% (w/v)
dextran sulfate, and 100 µg/ml yeast tRNA, at 65°C overnight.
Library filters were washed in 0.1× SSC, 0.1% (w/v) SDS at 65°C for
2 × 15 min. Two positive plaques were identified and purified. These
were found to contain identical inserts of ~4.5 kb but, nevertheless,
lacked sequences encoding the amino-terminal 230 amino acids.
The missing 5 sequence was obtained using the rapid amplification
of cDNA ends (RACE) (Frohman and Martin, 1989 ), essentially as
described previously (Harvey et al., 1991 ), using random-nonamer primed
Lymnaea CNS first-strand cDNA as template. The first-stage
PCR used the transcript-specific primer 21.2:
5 -CGTAATTGTGACGAAAATCTTCCATGTCTA-3 in combination with
RoRidT17
and Ro (Harvey et al., 1991 ). Amplification was
for 3 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 42°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 1 min, followed by 38 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 60°C for 1 min, and
72°C for 1 min. The second-stage PCR, which contained the
transcript-specific primer 21.1:
5 -GAT TCTAAATGAGTAACGATGTAA-3 and
Ri (Harvey et al., 1991 ), was for 38 cycles of
94°C for 1 min, 57°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 1 min. This yielded
a product of ~450 bp. The remaining 5 sequence was obtained by a
second RACE step in which primer 21.1 was used in the first-stage PCR
with
RoRidT17
and Ro, and primer 21.4:
5 -TAG AGGTCGGTGTAGGCCCGGCCC-3 was used with
Ri in the second-stage PCR. For the first-stage
PCR, amplification was for 3 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 42°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 3 min, followed by 37 cycles of 94°C for 1 min,
58°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min. For the second-stage PCR,
amplification was for 35 cycles of 94°C for 1 min, 62°C for 1 min,
and 72°C for 2 min. Products were cloned into either M13mp18 or
pBluescript II SK+ (Stratagene, Heidelberg, Germany), taking advantage
of restriction endonuclease recognition sites (underlined) incorporated
into the PCR primers, and sequenced.
A complete cDNA, for expression purposes, was constructed by
ligating part of the cDNA that was obtained from the library to a
cDNA fragment that contained the 5 end, which was generated using
the PCR. The 5 portion was amplified using primers 21.6:
5 -CGT CTTGGACATACGATGACCAGC-3 , which
represents the first three codons of the signal peptide and upstream
5 -untranslated sequence; and 21.7:
5 -AAG AAGCTTGGACCCGATGCCCAC-3 ,
which recognizes a sequence that includes a naturally occurring
HindIII restriction site (in italics) present within the
library-derived cDNA fragment. Amplification was for 40 cycles of
94°C for 1 min, 60°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2.5 min. The
resultant product (~1.1 kb in size) was digested with
BamHI and EcoRI at unique restriction
endonuclease recognition sites (underlined) that were incorporated into
primers 21.6 and 21.7, respectively, cloned into the corresponding
sites in pBluescript II SK+, and sequenced. This plasmid was linearized
with BamHI, dephosphorylated, and then digested with
HindIII, which cleaves at the site within primer 21.7. The
~4.5 kb library-derived 3 -cDNA fragment was partially digested with
XbaI, and an ~2.5 kb fragment was isolated and ligated
into the XbaI site of pGEM-3Zf(+) (Serva Feinbiochemica,
Heidelberg, Germany). This plasmid, which contains all of the 3 coding
sequence, was subsequently digested with BamHI (which
recognizes a unique site within the vector polylinker),
dephosphorylated, and finally digested with HindIII. The 5
and 3 fragments were then ligated together at the common
HindIII site, and the complete cDNA cloned as a
BamHI fragment into the BamHI site of pGEMHE
(Liman et al., 1992 ) to generate plasmid pleGluR2.
In vitro transcription, injection of oocytes, and
electrophysiology. Capped RNA was transcribed in vitro
after linearization of plasmid pleGluR2 with NheI using T7
RNA polymerase. This was injected (at a concentration of 250 ng/µl;
~50 nl per oocyte) into manually defolliculated stage V and VI
Xenopus oocytes; control oocytes were injected with ~50 nl
of sterile deionized water. Oocytes were maintained at 19°C in
Barth's medium [(in mM): 88 NaCl, 1 KCl, 0.41 CaCl2, 0.33 Ca(NO3)2, 0.82 MgSO4, 2.4 NaHCO3, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.6, supplemented with 100 µg/ml each of gentamycin,
penicillin, and streptomycin] for 2-7 d.
Oocytes were voltage-clamped at room temperature (RT) using a standard
two-microelectrode amplifier (Bio-logic, Claix, France), and recordings
were made in standard frog Ringer's solution (in
mM): 115 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 1.85 CaCl2, 5 HEPES, pH 7.2. Electrodes were filled
with 3 M KCl and had resistances of between 2 and
5 M . The bath was connected to a ground Ag/AgCl electrode through a
1 M KCl/agar bridge. Data were either recorded on
a chart recorder or stored on an IBM PC-AT compatible computer using a
Labmaster A-D converter (Scientific Solutions, Solon, OH). Oocytes were
continuously perfused with frog Ringer's at ~5 ml/min and drugs,
which were dissolved in either Ringer's, dimethylsulfoxide, or
ethanol, were bath-applied. At the dilutions used, the organic solvents
had no effect on either the resting membrane potential or the membrane
conductance. Concanavalin A type IV (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Germany) was
dissolved in frog Ringer's to yield a final concentration (for the
tetramer) of either 1 or 10 µM, assuming a
molecular weight for the monomer of 26.5 kDa.
All experiments were performed at a clamp potential of 60 mV unless
otherwise stated. Current-voltage relationships and null potentials
were determined using a 3 sec voltage ramp in the range of 120 mV to
+40 mV; individual steps were separated by 3 sec intervals. The current
in agonist-free solution was subtracted from that recorded in the
presence of 1 µM
L-glutamate to obtain the agonist-sensitive
current. To determine the ionic specificity of the channel, modified
Ringer's solutions containing decreasing concentrations of sodium ions
were prepared by substituting
N-methyl-D-glucamine for NaCl, and
adjusting the pH to 7.2 with HCl. A potassium-enriched solution (10 mM) was prepared by adding
K2SO4 to the normal
Ringer's solution. A sodium- and potassium-free solution was made by
iso-osmotically substituting
N-methyl-D-glucamine for NaCl and KCl,
and adjusting the pH to 7.2 with HCl. To study permeation of calcium
ions, the NaCl concentration of the Ringer's was maintained at 115 mM, and the CaCl2
concentration was either lowered to 0.185 mM (low
calcium solution) or raised to 10 mM (high
calcium solution).
Data were analyzed using pClamp 5.1 (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA)
and SigmaPlot 4.1 (Jandel Scientific, Erkrath, Germany) software.
Concentration-response curves were fitted to the nonlinear Hill
equation: I = 1/(1 + (EC50/x)nH,
where I is the measured amplitude of the evoked current,
x is the effector concentration, EC50
is the effector concentration causing the half-maximal response, and
nH is the Hill number.
Acetylcholine chloride, GABA, L-aspartic
acid, L-cysteic acid, flufenamic acid,
L-glutamic acid, L-glutamic
acid diethyl ester (GDEE), glycine, L-homocysteic
acid, kainic acid,
N-methyl-DL-aspartic acid,
niflumic acid, picrotoxin, and taurine were purchased from Sigma.
(RS)- -amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid,
(D)-2-amino-3-phosphonopropionic acid
(D-AP3),
(D)-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid
(D-AP4),
(D)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid
(D-AP5),
1-(4-chlorobenzoyl)piperazine-2,3-dicarboxylic acid (CBPD),
6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX),
6,7-dinitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (DNQX), domoic acid, ibotenic acid,
philanthotoxin 343 (PhTX-343), and L-quisqualic
acid were from Tocris Neuramin (Langford, Bristol, England).
In situ hybridization. Nervous systems from adult
Lymnaea (shell length ~30 mm) were prepared for in
situ hybridization as follows. Dissected nervous tissue was fixed
in 1% (w/v) paraformaldehyde/1% (v/v) acetic acid overnight, then
dehydrated through an ascending ethanol series. It was then incubated
in ethanol/amylacetate (1:1) for 30 min, amylacetate for 2 × 30 min,
and amylacetate/paraffin (1:1) for 30 min, and finally embedded in
paraffin. Either 7 µm sections of whole nervous systems or 5 µm
sections of dissected buccal ganglia were cut using a microtome,
mounted onto 0.5% (w/v)
KCr(SO4)2/0.5% (w/v)
gelatin-coated slides using Eiweiss-Glycerin (Merck, Darmstadt,
Germany), and dried at 37°C overnight. Before in situ
hybridization, sections were incubated at 60°C for 1 hr, immersed in
xylene for 2 × 15 min, dehydrated through an ascending ethanol series,
and air-dried for 30 min. The tissue was permeabilized by incubation in
0.02% (w/v) pepsin (Boehringer Mannheim) in 0.2 M HCl at 37°C for 7 min, post-fixed in 2%
(w/v) paraformaldehyde in PBS (130 mM NaCl, 7 mM
Na2HPO4, 3 mM
NaH2PO4) at RT for 4 min,
and then treated with 1% (w/v) hydroxylammoniumchloride (Merck) in PBS
at RT for 15 min. Sections were subsequently washed in PBS at RT for 5 min, dehydrated through an ascending ethanol series, and stored in 96%
(v/v) ethanol at 4°C until use.
A 45-base antisense oligonucleotide
(5 -ACGCGGCTCAGACCCTGTGCCGTGCCATAGATGACCAGCATCTCC-3 ; complementary to
the nucleotide sequence encoding residues 139-154 of the mature
Lym-eGluR2 polypeptide; Fig. 1) was labeled to high
specific activity ( 109 cpm/µg) using
[ 35S]dATP (Du Pont de Nemours, Bad Homburg,
Germany) and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (Life Technologies,
Eggenstein, Germany), as described previously (Wisden et al., 1991 ).
Hybridization was in 50% (v/v) formamide, 4× SSC, 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7, 1 mM sodium pyrophosphate, 20 mM dithiothreitol, 5× Denhardt's solution,
100 µg/ml polyadenylic acid, 120 µg/ml heparin, 10% (w/v) dextran
sulfate, and 200 µg/ml acid/alkali-denatured salmon sperm DNA,
containing 1250 cpm probe/µl, at 42°C overnight. Slides were washed
in 1× SSC at 55°C for 2 × 30 min, then dipped in Kodak NTB-3
photographic emulsion (Integra Biosciences, Fernwald, Germany).
Sections were developed, as described previously (Harvey et al.,
1994a ), after between 50 and 140 d. In negative control experiments,
the hybridization mixture contained, in addition, a 200-fold excess of
the same unlabeled oligonucleotide.
Fig. 1.
Alignment of the Lymnaea Lym-eGluR2
sequence with those of the rat GluR5, GluR6, and GluR7 subunits. The
amino acid sequences (shown in single-letter code) were aligned using
the computer program PILEUP (Wisconsin Package, Version 8, September
1994, Genetic Computer Group, 575 Science Drive, Madison, WI);
dots denote gaps that have been introduced to maximize the
alignment. Positions at which all four of the sequences are identical
are boxed. Amino acids are numbered from the proposed mature
amino-terminal residues; the signal peptides (von Heijne, 1986 ) are
indicated by negative numbering. The three putative
membrane-spanning domains (TM1, TM3, and TM4) and the presumed
membrane-associated segment (TM2) (Keinänen et al., 1990 ;
Hollmann et al., 1994 ) are marked below the sequences by
solid and broken lines, respectively. For the
Lymnaea polypeptide, potential N-linked glycosylation sites
(in the large amino-terminal presumed extracellular domain) and
potential phosphorylation sites for protein kinase C and
multifunctional calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II (within
presumed intracellular regions) are denoted by asterisks,
open circles, and filled circles, respectively.
Note that serine residue 593, which is a target for phosphorylation by
multifunctional calmodulin-dependent protein kinase type II, is also
part of a recognition sequence for protein kinase C. The mature
sequences of the rat GluR5, GluR6, and GluR7 subunits have been taken
from Bettler et al. (1992) . The sequence of the cDNA, from which the
sequence of the Lym-eGluR2 polypeptide was deduced, has been given the
EMBL accession number X87404[GenBank].
[View Larger Version of this Image (111K GIF file)]
RESULTS
Structure of Lym-eGluR2
Degenerate PCR, using primers designed on the basis of conserved
amino acid sequences amino-terminal of the first (TM1) and within the
second (TM3) (Keinänen et al., 1990 ; Hollmann et al., 1994 )
presumed membrane-spanning domain of mammalian GluR1-GluR4 subunits,
resulted in the amplification of four different types of
Lymnaea cDNA. All of these encode GluR-like polypeptides
(provisionally named clone #2, #13, #19, and #21) (Darlison et al.,
1994 ), and these are distinct from the previously described
Lymnaea GluR sequence (Hutton et al., 1991 ). A full-length
clone encoding one of these (clone #21) has now been obtained using a
combination of conventional cDNA library screening and 5 RACE. This
cDNA contains an open reading frame that specifies a protein of 953 amino acids (Fig. 1), the first 24 of which have the properties of
a signal peptide (von Heijne, 1986 ). The mature polypeptide is
predicted to have a molecular weight of 105 kDa, and exhibits all of
the features of mammalian glutamate-gated cation-channel subunits,
including a long amino-terminal presumed extracellular domain,
three putative membrane-spanning domains (TM1, TM3, and TM4), an
assumed membrane-associated segment (TM2) (Hollmann et al., 1994 ), and
a carboxyl terminus that is thought to be intracellular. In addition,
it displays strong sequence identity to mammalian non-NMDA GluR
subunits: 38-39% to GluR1-GluR4, 44-48% to GluR5-GluR7, and 37%
to KA-1 and KA-2. The molluscan polypeptide is less related in sequence
to the 1 and 2 subunits (30 and 28% identity, respectively), to
-1 (23% identity), to NR1 (25% identity), and to NR2A-NR2D
(22-24% identity). It also exhibits 37, 35, 32, and 27% identity,
respectively, to the original Lymnaea GluR polypeptide and
the Drosophila DGluR-I, DGluR-II, and DNMDAR-I subunits.
Surprisingly, the new Lymnaea sequence displays 37-40%
identity to the avian, amphibian, and piscine kainate-binding proteins
(Gregor et al., 1989 ; Wada et al., 1989 ; Kimura et al., 1993 ; Wo and
Oswald, 1994 ), which do not form functional ion channels and which are
considerably smaller in size (i.e., ~50 kDa) than ionotropic
GluRs.
We have named the Lymnaea polypeptide, which we describe
here, Lym-eGluR2; the letter ``e'' stands for excitatory. Inhibitory
ionotropic GluRs, also known to exist in molluscs (Yarowsky and
Carpenter, 1976 ; Kehoe, 1978 ; Ikemoto and Akaike, 1988 ), when
identified at the molecular level will be given the prefix ``i.'' The
originally described Lymnaea GluR polypeptide (Hutton et
al., 1991 ), which has been named LymGluR by others (Hollmann and
Heinemann, 1994 ), will henceforth be known as Lym-eGluR1.
As with mammalian ionotropic GluR subunits, the Lym-eGluR2 polypeptide
is predicted to be glycosylated. Six consensus sites for N-linked sugar
attachment are located in the amino-terminal presumed extracellular
domain. Three of these (N242, N380, and N395; Fig. 1) are found at the
equivalent positions in GluR5, GluR6, and GluR7; one site (N395) is
conserved in all non-NMDA GluR sequences. The Lymnaea
sequence also has five consensus motifs for phosphorylation by protein
kinase C and one for multifunctional calmodulin-dependent protein
kinase type II (Woodgett et al., 1986 ; Kemp and Pearson, 1990 ) (Fig. 1)
in regions of the polypeptide that are predicted to be intracellular
(i.e., either between TM1 and TM2 or TM2 and TM3, or in the
carboxyl-terminal segment after TM4).
Ionic properties of homo-oligomeric Lym-eGluR2 channels
Injection of Xenopus oocytes with in
vitro-transcribed RNA for the Lymnaea polypeptide
resulted in the appearance of functional glutamate-gated ion channels
in the cell membrane. Large inward currents (at a holding potential of
60 mV) could be reliably and readily detected; for example, 1 µM L-glutamate elicited
responses, with an average amplitude of ~200 nA (n ~ 100 oocytes) 2 d postinjection, that reached ~1.5 µA after 5-7 d. The
glutamate-evoked currents (IGlu) were
dose-dependent (Fig. 2A) and had a fast time
course of both onset and offset. There was no evidence under our
experimental conditions of desensitization, i.e., no significant
reduction in current was observed upon agonist application for a period
of up to 3 min (data not shown). No responses were evoked by the
nonglutamatergic compounds acetylcholine, GABA, glycine, and taurine in
oocytes that did respond to glutamate. Control oocytes, which were
injected instead with deionized water, did not respond to glutamate
(tested at up to 1 mM).
Fig. 2.
Dose-dependence and current-voltage
relationship of glutamate-evoked responses at Lym-eGluR2 channels
expressed in Xenopus oocytes. A, Effect of four
different concentrations of L-glutamate on a
single oocyte 5 d postinjection. Downward deflections denote
inward currents, and horizontal bars indicate the duration
of agonist application. B, Current-voltage relationship of
the response elicited by 1 µM
L-glutamate from an oocyte 5 d
postinjection.
[View Larger Version of this Image (12K GIF file)]
The current-voltage (I/V) relationship of the expressed
channels for glutamate-induced responses showed a pronounced voltage
dependence (Fig. 2B). Between 120 mV and approximately
60 mV, the I/V curve was linear; however, at more positive
voltages, it exhibited strong inward rectification. No outward currents
were observed at positive membrane potentials. Because it is impossible
to determine the reversal potential from this type of curve, we
determined the null potential for IGlu,
i.e., the potential at which zero current was observed for the first
time; this was 11.0 ± 4.5 mV.
To elucidate the nature of the ions responsible for the current flow
through the glutamate-gated channels, we examined the effect of
altering the ionic gradient for specific ions on the I/V
relationship. When sodium ions in the Ringer's were replaced by
N-methyl-D-glucamine, the null
potential for IGlu shifted in the
hyperpolarizing direction (Fig. 3A) and the
amplitude of the current was dramatically reduced (Fig. 3B),
showing that sodium ions participate in the agonist-induced current. At
concentrations between 10 and 115 mM, the null
potential was linearly related to the log of the extracellular sodium
ion concentration (Fig. 3A); the slope of this relationship
was 34 mV per 10-fold change in sodium ion concentration. This value is
smaller than that expected from the Nernst equation, which predicts 58 mV per 10-fold change if only sodium ions are permeable. Thus, some
other ion(s) must also penetrate the channel. This notion is supported
by the observation that the null potential deviates from the linear
relationship at sodium ion concentrations close to 1 mM (Fig. 3A), where the contribution
of other ions such as potassium would be more prominent. When the
extracellular potassium ion concentration was increased from 2.5 to 10 mM, in the presence of sodium ions, the null
potential shifted in the depolarizing direction by ~10 mV (data not
shown). Replacement of both sodium and potassium ions by
N-methyl-D-glucamine completely
eliminated the response to glutamate (Fig. 3B).
Fig. 3.
Ionic permeability of Lym-eGluR2 channels
expressed in Xenopus oocytes. A, Relationship of
the null potential for glutamate-evoked currents to the external
concentration of sodium ions. The data derive from two oocytes 5 d
postinjection. B, Current-voltage relationships of the
response elicited by 1 µM
L-glutamate from an oocyte 6 d postinjection in
normal Ringer's (open circles), in a Ringer's that
contained only 20% of the normal sodium ion concentration
(filled squares), or in a sodium- and potassium-free
Ringer's (inverted filled triangles). C,
Current-voltage relationships of the response evoked by 1 µM L-glutamate from an
oocyte 6 d postinjection in either normal frog Ringer's (open
circles) or a low calcium (0.185 mM)
Ringer's (inverted filled triangles). D,
Current-voltage relationships of the responses elicited by 1 µM L-glutamate from an
oocyte 6 d postinjection in either normal frog Ringer's (open
circles) or a high calcium (10 mM) Ringer's
(filled triangles). In B-D, responses have been
normalized to that evoked by 1 µM glutamate in
normal Ringer's at a holding potential of 120 mV.
[View Larger Version of this Image (29K GIF file)]
To confirm that IGlu was carried by only
sodium and potassium ions and that there was no significant
contribution by calcium ions, which might also activate endogenous
oocyte calcium-dependent chloride channels (Dascal, 1987 ), we examined
the effect of niflumic acid and flufenamic acid (Vernino et al., 1992 ).
Incubation of oocytes with these two chloride-channel blockers (both at
400 µM) for 15 min had no effect on either the
size or shape of glutamate-induced currents (data not shown). In
addition, either reducing (to 0.185 mM) or
increasing (to 10 mM) the external calcium ion
concentration had no effect on either the amplitude or
voltage-dependence of IGlu or the null
potential (Fig. 3C,D).
Agonist selectivity of homo-oligomeric Lym-eGluR2 channels
The EC50 for channel activation by
L-glutamate was 1.2 ± 0.3 µM (n = 10 oocytes; Fig.
4A), and the Hill number was 2.1 ± 0.4, indicating that more than one agonist molecule is required for channel
opening. Several other glutamatergic ligands were tested for their
ability to evoke currents, and kainate, ibotenate, and AMPA were found
to be powerful agonists (Fig. 4A,B). Note that control
oocytes did not respond to any of these compounds (each tested at up to
1 mM). The rank order of potency of the operant
agonists was: glutamate kainate > ibotenate > AMPA. The
EC50 values for kainate, ibotenate, and AMPA were
22.3 ± 9.0 µM (n = 10 oocytes),
37.4 ± 10.0 µM (n = 8), and 67.2 ± 10.3 µM (n = 10), respectively. As
with glutamate, no significant reduction in current was observed upon
the application of any of these agonists for a period of up to 3 min
(data not shown), although the response evoked by kainate appeared to
exhibit a slightly slower onset than those elicited by the other
agonists (Fig. 4B).
Fig. 4.
Agonist pharmacology of Lym-eGluR2 channels
expressed in Xenopus oocytes. A, Dose-response
curves for L-glutamate (filled
circles), kainate (open squares), ibotenate
(filled triangles), and AMPA (inverted open
triangles). Each curve was determined on several oocytes (for
glutamate, n = 12; for kainate, n = 12; for
ibotenate, n = 10; and for AMPA, n = 12). Each
point represents the mean ± SD. Note that the response to each
concentration of a given agonist was normalized to the maximal response
(denoted as 100%) to that ligand. B, Selected traces of
responses evoked by maximally effective concentrations of various
glutamatergic agonists (Kainate, 300 µM; AMPA, 300 µM; Ibotenate, 300 µM; l-glutamate, 10 µM) on a single oocyte 6 d postinjection.
Downward deflections denote inward currents and
horizontal bars indicate the duration of agonist
application. C, A bar graph showing the efficacies of
various glutamatergic agonists. All agonists were tested at their
maximally effective concentrations on the same oocyte 5 d
postinjection. In this case, all responses were normalized to the
average peak current elicited by 10 µM
L-glutamate; the bars represent the
mean ± SD of between 4 and 10 experiments. The concentrations of
agonists used were: l-glutamate, 10 µM; Kainate, 300 µM; Ibotenate, 300 µM; AMPA, 300 µM; these were applied with a 10 min interval
between applications.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
GDEE, a drug that has been reported to inhibit native vertebrate
quisqualate receptors (Foster and Fagg, 1984 ) and to act as a weak
agonist at the rodent homo-oligomeric GluR1 receptor (Hollmann et al.,
1989 ; Sakimura et al., 1990 ), appeared to act as an agonist at the
molluscan receptor (data not shown) having an
EC50 of 64.0 ± 7.4 µM
(n = 4 oocytes). However, because the main breakdown product
of GDEE is glutamate, the activation seen may be a consequence of
low-level (1-2%) contamination by the latter. Other glutamatergic
agonists (each tested at up to 100 µM), such as
L-aspartate, L-cysteine,
domoate, L-homocysteate, NMDA (either alone or in
the presence of between 10 and 300 µM glycine),
and quisqualate, were unable to gate the Lym-eGluR2 channels.
When dose-response data for the various ligands were normalized to the
maximal glutamate response rather than to the maximal current evoked by
each individual agonist (Fig. 4A), it became evident that
kainate, ibotenate, and AMPA elicited smaller responses than
L-glutamate (data not shown). This was
particularly striking for kainate. We therefore examined this effect
further by comparing the responses, induced by maximally effective
concentrations of each compound, on the same oocyte. As shown in Figure
4C, kainate, ibotenate, and AMPA were observed to be less
efficacious than glutamate as agonists; kainate, for example, elicited
only ~20% of the current evoked by
L-glutamate. To determine whether the lower
efficacies of kainate, ibotenate, and AMPA are the result of
differences in agonist-induced desensitization, we repeated these
experiments in the presence of the plant lectin Concanavalin A, which
suppresses the desensitization of both vertebrate (Mayer and Vyklicky,
1989 ) and invertebrate (Mathers and Usherwood, 1976 ; Kehoe, 1978 )
GluRs. Under our conditions, this lectin had no significant effect on
either the magnitude or the shape of the responses induced by any of
the agonists (data not shown).
Antagonism of homo-oligomeric Lym-eGluR2 channels
We also examined the effects of various mammalian
ionotropic GluR antagonists on IGlu.
Currents induced by 1 µM
L-glutamate were reversibly inhibited by the
following non-NMDA receptor competitive antagonists (Fig.
5A,B): DNQX (IC50 = 1.4 ± 0.4 µM; n = 4 oocytes), CNQX
(IC50 = 2.2 ± 0.7 µM;
n = 5), and CBPD (IC50 = 2.5 ± 1.4 µM; n = 5). Agonist responses were
fully restored after a 10 min perfusion with frog Ringer's. The
classical NMDA receptor competitive antagonist
D-AP5 also inhibited
IGlu, albeit very weakly (Fig.
5A,B). Other phosphonic acid derivatives such as
D-AP3 and D-AP4 had no
effect (data not shown). PhTX-343, a synthetic derivative of the
polyamine amide wasp toxin philanthotoxin, was a comparatively poor
blocker of the molluscan receptor (IC50 = 45.0 ± 3.3 µM; n = 3 oocytes; Fig.
5B).
Fig. 5.
Antagonist pharmacology of Lym-eGluR2 channels
expressed in Xenopus oocytes. A, Selected traces
illustrating the inhibitory effect of 10 µM
DNQX and 50 µM D-AP5 on
responses evoked by 1 µM
L-glutamate on a single oocyte 4 d postinjection.
Downward deflections denote inward currents, and
horizontal bars indicate the duration of agonist (and
antagonist) application. Note that in both cases, the glutamate
response returned to normal after a washout period of 10 min.
B, Inhibition curves for various mammalian GluR antagonists.
Each point represents the mean ± SD of the percentage inhibition of
the current evoked by 1 µM
L-glutamate; the current elicited in the absence
of antagonist is denoted as 100%. Filled circles, DNQX;
open circles, CNQX; inverted filled triangles,
CBPD; open squares, PhTX-343; open triangles,
D-AP5. Each curve was determined on several
oocytes (for DNQX, n = 4; for CNQX, n = 5; for
CBPD, n = 5; for PhTX-343, n = 3; and for
D-AP5, n = 3).
[View Larger Version of this Image (16K GIF file)]
Localization of Lym-eGluR2 transcripts in the Lymnaea
nervous system
In situ hybridization, using a specific 45-base
oligonucleotide probe, was used to reveal Lym-eGluR2 transcripts within
the CNS of adult Lymnaea. Hybridization-positive neurons
were detected in all of the nine central ganglia (i.e., right and left
cerebral ganglia, right and left parietal ganglia, right and left pedal
ganglia, right and left pleural ganglia, and the visceral ganglion) and
in the paired buccal ganglia. Figure 6, A and
B, shows the labeling pattern in a representative section
through seven of these ganglia. Higher-power magnification of the
visceral ganglion (Fig. 6C) and the left parietal ganglion
(Fig. 6D) demonstrates the specificity and cytoplasmic
location of the hybridization signal; note also that control
hybridizations (see Materials and Methods) did not yield any signal.
Detailed analysis of hybridized sections reveals that a total of
350-400 neurons per nervous system express the Lym-eGluR2 gene. The
corresponding mRNA is found in heterogeneous populations of neurons,
the cell bodies of which range in size between 15 and 70 µm in
diameter; none of these are identifiable peptidergic cells. Within each
buccal ganglion, the Lym-eGluR2 transcript is detected in ~50 cells.
These include a cluster of ~10 cells, most of which are large (40-70
µm in diameter), and are located dorsoposteriorly (Fig.
7). Based on their size and position, these cells are
most likely the 4-cluster motorneurons (Goldschmeding et al., 1977 ;
Rose and Benjamin, 1979 ; Kemenes et al., 1991 ).
Fig. 6.
In situ hybridization localization of
the Lym-eGluR2 transcript in the adult Lymnaea nervous
system. Light-field (A) and corresponding dark-field
(B) photomicrographs are shown of a representative section.
Note that only 7 of the 11 ganglia are present in this section; the
right and left cerebral ganglia and the paired buccal ganglia do not
appear. Also shown are higher-magnification light-field
photomicrographs of the visceral ganglion (C) and the left
parietal ganglion (D). LPaG, Left parietal
ganglion; LPeG, left pedal ganglion; LPlG, left
pleural ganglion; RPaG, right parietal ganglion;
RPeG, right pedal ganglion; RPlG, right pleural
ganglion; VG, visceral ganglion. The arrows in
C and D point to strongly labeled cells or
clusters of cells. Scale bars: 260 µm (A and
B), 96 µm (C), and 49 µm
(D).
[View Larger Version of this Image (111K GIF file)]
Fig. 7.
In situ hybridization localization of
the Lym-eGluR2 transcript in adult Lymnaea buccal ganglia. A
light-field photomicrograph is shown of a section through a single
buccal ganglion. The arrows indicate five of the
hybridization-positive 4-cluster motorneurons that appear in this
section. Scale bar, 67 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (149K GIF file)]
DISCUSSION
Lym-eGluR2 is structurally related to the mammalian GluR5, GluR6,
and GluR7 subunits, but has a distinct pharmacology
The work described here represents the most detailed
electrophysiological and pharmacological characterization of any cloned
invertebrate glutamate-gated cation channel. The polypeptide that we
have identified in the fresh-water snail Lymnaea clearly
resembles in sequence (44-48% identity) the mammalian
kainate-selective GluR5-GluR7 family of subunits. Injection of
in vitro-transcribed RNA for the molluscan polypeptide into
Xenopus oocytes results in the appearance in the cell
membrane of homo-oligomeric channels that can be gated by low
micromolar concentrations of L-glutamate,
kainate, ibotenate, and AMPA.
Although Lym-eGluR2 is very similar in sequence to the mammalian
GluR5-GluR7 subunits, the molluscan channel exhibits some functional
differences compared with homo-oligomeric GluR5 and GluR6 channels. For
example, although all three receptors respond to kainate, the rank
order of potency for Lym-eGluR2 is glutamate kainate > ibotenate > AMPA; that for GluR5 is domoate kainate glutamate > AMPA (Sommer et al., 1992 ); and that for GluR6 is domoate > kainate
quisqualate > glutamate (Bettler et al., 1992 ; Hollmann and
Heinemann, 1994 ). Note that ibotenate was not tested at GluR5 and GluR6
receptors. Although the GluR7 subunit does not form functional
homo-oligomeric channels, it does bind various GluR ligands; the rank
order of potency for displacing [3H]kainate has
been reported to be: domoate glutamate > quisqualate (Bettler et
al., 1992 ). Thus, there are two major pharmacological distinctions
between Lym-eGluR2 and the GluR5-GluR7 polypeptides: Lym-eGluR2 is
insensitive to domoate and quisqualate, and the
EC50 for channel activation of Lym-eGluR2
receptors is ~20-fold greater for kainate (22.3 µM) than for glutamate (1.2 µM). The lack of response of Lym-eGluR2
channels to quisqualate is consistent with electrophysiological studies
on molluscs that demonstrate that this compound activates inhibitory
GluRs (Bolshakov et al., 1991 ; Quinlan and Murphy, 1991 ). Furthermore,
although ibotenate has been shown to activate GluRs on molluscan
neurons that mediate hyperpolarization (Roberts et al., 1982 ; Katz and
Levitan, 1993 ), this molecule also induces excitatory responses when
applied to leech (Hirudo medicinalis) (Roberts et al., 1982 ;
Mat Jais et al., 1984 ), horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus),
and molluscan (Helix aspersa) neurons (Roberts et al.,
1982 ).
The Lym-eGluR2 channel is permeable to sodium and potassium ions
but not to calcium ions, a feature that is characteristic of
invertebrate excitatory GluRs (Jan and Jan, 1976 ; Kehoe, 1978 ; Mat Jais
et al., 1984 ). This is in contrast to the situation for the mammalian
homo-oligomeric GluR6 receptor. When expressed in either human
embryonic kidney 293 cells (Köhler et al., 1993 ) or
Xenopus oocytes (Egebjerg and Heinemann, 1993 ), the GluR6
subunit yields channels that are permeable to calcium. This polypeptide
exists in different forms, which arise by enzymatic modification of the
corresponding mRNA (RNA editing) (Sommer et al., 1991 ; Köhler et
al., 1993 ). This results in subunits having amino-acid differences at
three positions (two in TM1 and one in TM2), which affect the extent of
calcium permeability. Although the Lym-eGluR2 polypeptide has a valine
(V528; Fig. 1) and a tyrosine (Y532) in TM1 and a glutamine (Q582) in
TM2 (residues that are found in a hemi-edited GluR6 subunit), we have
no evidence whatsoever for editing of the molluscan RNA at any
position.
Relationship of Lym-eGluR2 to other cloned invertebrate
glutamate-gated cation channels
The sequences of four invertebrate GluR-like polypeptides
have been described previously; three of these (DGluR-I, DGluR-II, and
DNMDAR-I) derive from Drosophila and one (Lym-eGluR1,
formerly called LymGluR) emanates from Lymnaea. However, we
consider none of these to be capable of forming bona fide
glutamate-gated cation channels. The first published
Drosophila sequence, DGluR-II (Schuster et al., 1991 ), which
displays no >33% identity to any mammalian GluR polypeptide, was
reported to form homo-oligomeric channels when the corresponding cDNA
was expressed in Xenopus oocytes. However, these could only
be gated by L-glutamate and
L-aspartate, and then only at very high
concentrations (the EC50 values for channel
activation were ~35 and ~50 mM,
respectively). Subsequently, the same group (Ultsch et al., 1992 ) noted
that artefactual (i.e., non-receptor) responses were observed when
concentrations of glutamate >10 mM were applied
to oocytes. Another Drosophila polypeptide, DGluR-I, which
is most closely related in sequence (41-44% identity) to the
mammalian AMPA-selective GluR1-GluR4 subunits, was reported (Ultsch et
al., 1992 ) to form homo-oligomeric channels (albeit inefficiently;
maximum currents were of the order of 10 nA) that could be blocked by
CNQX and PhTX-343. However, surprisingly, these could be gated only by
kainate; the presumptive natural ligand, glutamate, was ineffective.
The two other invertebrate GluR-like polypeptides that have been
described are DNMDAR-I (Ultsch et al., 1993 ), which exhibits greatest
similarity (46% identity) to the mammalian NR1 subunit, and Lym-eGluR1
(Hutton et al., 1991 ), which most closely resembles (43-46% identity)
the mammalian AMPA-selective GluR1-GluR4 subunits. Neither
DNMDAR-I nor Lym-eGluR1 form functional homo-oligomeric glutamate-gated
channels when the corresponding in vitro-transcribed RNA is
injected into Xenopus oocytes.
The polypeptide described here, Lym-eGluR2, exhibits 35, 32, and
27% identity to DGluR-I, DGluR-II, and DNMDAR-I, respectively; thus,
it does not appear to be the species homolog of any of the
Drosophila GluR polypeptides. Furthermore, it is the only
invertebrate GluR protein that forms robust homo-oligomeric channels
that can be gated by micromolar concentrations of a variety of
glutamatergic agonists and blocked by several mammalian non-NMDA
receptor antagonists. It therefore represents an excellent tool with
which to dissect those polypeptide domains that are responsible for the
functional differences between this receptor and vertebrate GluRs. It
is unclear why Lym-eGluR2 readily forms glutamate-gated channels and
Lym-eGluR1, DGluR-I, DGluR-II, and DNMDAR-I do not. However, it is well
known that Drosophila ligand-gated ion-channel polypeptides
rarely form functional homo-oligomers (Bertrand et al., 1994 ; Harvey et
al., 1994b ). In contrast, of seven full-length ligand-gated ion-channel
cDNAs that this laboratory has isolated from Lymnaea, four
have, to date, been shown to form functional GABA or glutamate
receptors (Harvey et al., 1991 ; Darlison et al., 1994 ; Darlison et al.,
unpublished observations; this study).
Relationship of Lym-eGluR2 to a native receptor on
buccal motorneurons
In situ hybridization has revealed that the Lym-eGluR2
transcript is distributed throughout the Lymnaea nervous
system, being present in many cells within each of the nine central
ganglia and the paired buccal ganglia; these data strongly suggest that
Lym-eGluR2 has an important function in excitatory neurotransmission in
this animal. Furthermore, in the buccal ganglia, the Lym-eGluR2 gene is
expressed in an identifiable group of cells, namely the 4-cluster
motorneurons, which are known to play a role in the feeding rhythm
(Goldschmeding et al., 1977 ; Rose and Benjamin, 1979 ). Although it is
currently unclear whether Lym-eGluR2 exists as a homo-oligomer in
vivo, it is evident that the corresponding gene is not frequently
coexpressed with any of the other four Lymnaea GluR-like
genes that we have identified to date (i.e., those encoding Lym-eGluR1,
clone #2, clone #13, and clone #19; data not shown).
Recently, a GluR has been characterized on buccal motorneurons of
the closely related gastropod Helisoma trivolvis (Quinlan
and Murphy, 1991 ; Quinlan et al., 1995 ). These neurons are excited by
S2 interneurons of the tripartite feeding central pattern generator,
which control the second phase of the bite cycle, namely the
scraping of food particles from the substrate and the retraction of
the radula (the first phase is the protraction of the radula to
contact the food substrate, and the third phase is radular tensing to
extrude the food down the esophagus). This excitation of the follower
motorneurons could be mimicked by the application of either glutamate
or kainate and blocked by CNQX (Quinlan and Murphy, 1991 ); quisqualate
could not activate the excitatory GluR but could imitate the
hyperpolarizing effect of glutamate on the same and other S2 follower
motorneurons. Interestingly, the excitatory receptor did not show
evidence of desensitization. This property might be expected to be of
great importance for neurons that receive tonic input and which must
rhythmically fire, such as those involved in patterned behaviors. In
conclusion, the deduced location and functional properties of
Lym-eGluR2 strongly suggest that it is the species homolog of (a
component of) the excitatory GluR that has been identified on
Helisoma buccal motorneurons (Quinlan and Murphy, 1991 ).
FOOTNOTES
Received Oct. 11, 1995; revised Jan. 29, 1996; accepted Feb. 2, 1996.
This work was supported in part by a research grant (BIO2-CT93-0243 to
M.G.D.) and a concerted action (BIO2-CT93-0169) from the European
Commission under the Biotechnology Programme 1992-1994, a European
Research Grant from the European Science Foundation (M.G.D. and
J.v.M.), and an international postdoctoral fellowship from the Wellcome
Trust, United Kingdom (M.A.). We thank Hye-Chin Kim for expert
technical assistance, Dr. Erno Vreugdenhil for the Lymnaea
cDNA library, Dr. Emily Liman for pGEMHE, Günter Ellinghausen and
Hans-Hinrich Hönck for the preparation and injection of oocytes,
Sönke Harder for DNA sequencing, Marion Däumigen-Kullmann
for oligonucleotide synthesis, and Dr. Michael Pusch and Professors
Thomas Jentsch and Dietmar Richter for help and access to
electrophysiological equipment. M.G.D. also thanks Professor Dietmar
Richter for his continued support.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Mark G. Darlison, Institut
für Zellbiochemie und Klinische Neurobiologie,
Universitäts-Krankenhaus Eppendorf, Universität Hamburg,
Martinistrasse 52, 20246 Hamburg, Germany.
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