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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 2002, 22(10):3873-3880
Mutational Analysis of the Conserved Cysteines of the Rat
P2X2 Purinoceptor
J. Dylan
Clyne,
Lin-Fang
Wang, and
Richard I.
Hume
Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1048
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ABSTRACT |
P2X receptors are ATP-gated cation channels that are widely
expressed in the brain. The extracellular domains of all seven P2X
receptors contain 10 conserved cysteines, which could form disulfide
bonds or binding sites for transition metals that modulate P2X
receptors. To test whether these cysteines are critical for receptor
function, we studied wild-type rat P2X2 receptors and 10 mutant P2X2 receptors, each containing an alanine
substituted for a cysteine. Nine mutants were functional but had
reduced maximum currents compared with wild-type P2X2
expressed in either Xenopus oocytes or human embryonic
kidney (HEK) 293 cells. The 10th mutant (C224A) did not respond
to ATP when expressed in oocytes and gave very small
currents in HEK 293 cells. Seven mutants (C113A, C124A, C130A, C147A,
C158A, C164A, and C214A) showed rightward shifts (9- to 30-fold) in
their ATP concentration-response relationships and very little
potentiation by zinc. In contrast, C258A and C267A had EC50
values similar to those of wild-type P2X2 and were
potentiated by zinc. Acidic pH potentiated wild-type and all mutant
receptor currents. Despite the loss of zinc potentiation in seven
mutants, these cysteines are unlikely to be exposed in the zinc-binding site, because [2-(trimethylammonium)ethyl] methanethiosulfonate bromide did not prevent zinc potentiation of wild-type
receptor currents. On the basis of correlations in the maximum current, EC50, zinc potentiation, and pH potentiation, we
suggest that the following cysteine pairs form disulfide bonds:
C113-C164, C214-C224, and C258-C267. We also suggest that C124,
C130, C147, and C158 form two disulfide bonds, but we are unable to
assign specific cysteine pairs to these two bonds.
Key words:
P2X; purinergic; mutagenesis; disulfide bonds; DTT; zinc; pH
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INTRODUCTION |
In both the CNS and peripheral
nervous system, ATP acts as a neurotransmitter and causes fast
excitatory responses by direct activation of a class of ligand-gated
ion channels called P2X receptors (Barnard et al., 1997 ; Burnstock,
1997 , 1999 ; Khakh, 2001 ). Over the past decade, seven P2X subtypes
(P2X1-7) have been cloned from rats, each with
homologs in mice and humans (Brake and Julius, 1996 ; North and
Surprenant, 2000 ). With the exception of P2X6,
all subtypes readily form homomeric receptors when expressed in
heterologous cells (Lewis et al., 1995 ; Torres et al., 1998b , 1999 ; Le
et al., 1999 ; King et al., 2000 ) and most likely assemble as trimers
(Nicke et al., 1998 ; Stoop et al., 1999 ). Each subunit contains two
transmembrane domains separated by a large extracellular domain
(Newbolt et al., 1998 ; Torres et al., 1998a ). The extracellular domain
contains 10 cysteines conserved in all cloned P2X receptors, but the
functional significance of these conserved cysteines is unknown.
These conserved cysteines could form up to five disulfide bonds, which
would stabilize the conformation of the receptor (Hansen et al., 1997 ).
Another common role for cysteines in proteins is the binding of
transition metals (Christianson, 1991 ; Vallee and Falchuk, 1993 ). For
example, three cysteines in the human skeletal muscle chloride channel
are necessary for zinc inhibition (Kurz et al., 1999 ). Low
concentrations of zinc (<100 µM) potentiate homomeric
P2X2, P2X3, and
P2X4 receptor currents (Seguela et al., 1996 ;
Garcia-Guzman et al., 1997 ; Nakazawa and Ohno, 1997 ; Nakazawa et al.,
1997 ; Le et al., 1998 ; Miller et al., 1998 ; Wildman et al., 1998 ,
1999a ,b ; Xiong et al., 1999 ; Acuna-Castillo et al., 2000 ; Zhong et al.,
2000 ). Thus, some of the conserved cysteines of P2X receptors might be
necessary for zinc binding rather than disulfide bond formation.
In this study, we used site-directed mutagenesis to replace each of the
conserved cysteines with an alanine to test whether these cysteines are
necessary to form functional receptors and for the receptors to respond
to zinc. We chose to study homomeric P2X2
receptors because they exhibit slow desensitization to ATP and are
highly potentiated by zinc. Our results suggest that none of the
conserved cysteines are directly involved in zinc binding. Furthermore,
by assuming that mutating either cysteine of a disulfide bond should
produce similar changes in receptor properties, we have been able to
make some specific predictions for which cysteine pairs are disulfide bonded.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Mutagenesis. Rat P2X2 cDNA in
pcDNA1 was obtained from Dr. D. Julius (University of
California, San Francisco, CA) (Brake et al., 1994 ). Mutagenic
oligonucleotides were obtained from Operon Technologies, Inc. (Alameda,
CA) and contained the base changes necessary for a single amino acid
substitution and for the introduction or deletion of a restriction
enzyme recognition site. Most mutant P2X2
receptors were made using the Kunkel mutagenesis method (Kunkel, 1985 ;
Kunkel et al., 1987 ). Briefly, a uridine-containing
P2X2 template was made by growing the plasmid in
BW313 cells in medium supplemented with 0.4 µg/ml uridine. These
cells were subsequently infected with M13K07 helper phage to make a
single-stranded template. Mutagenic oligonucleotides were
phosphorylated with T4 polynucleotide kinase, annealed to the
single-stranded uridine-containing P2X2 template,
and extended using Sequenase version 2.0 T7 polymerase (United
States Biochemicals/Amersham, Piscataway, NJ). Transformation of the mutagenic reaction into DH5 cells removed
uridine-containing DNA. Putative mutants were first screened by
restriction enzyme digestion and subsequently confirmed by DNA
sequencing (University of Michigan DNA Sequencing Core, Ann Arbor, MI).
For some mutations, we used overlap extension by PCR (Ho et al.,
1989 ; Vallejo et al., 1995 ). Each mutant is referred to by the original
amino acid (one-letter code) followed by the residue number and the
substituted amino acid (one-letter code). The oligonucleotides
sequences and the diagnostic enzymes introduced or deleted were as
follows: C113A, 5'-CCTTGGGAACAGCGCCAGAGAGCATG-3' (adds
HaeII); C124A, 5'-CACAGCTCTACCGCGCATTCAGACGACG-3' (adds BsMI); C130A, 5'-GACGACGACGCCATTGCCGGACAG-3' (adds
BsaHI); C147A, 5'-TGGGATTCGCACAGGTCATGCGGTACCCTATTACCAT-3'
(adds KpnI); C158A, 5'-GACTCCAAGACCGCCGAGGTGTC-3'
(adds AciI); C164A, 5'-GTGTCAGCCTGGGCTCCGGTGGAG-3' (adds
BsaWI); C214A, 5'-CCTCAAGCATGCCACATTTGATCAGGAC-3' (adds SphI); C224A, 5'-CTCTGACCCATATGCTCCCATCTTCAGG-3' (adds
NdeI); C224S, 5'-CTCTGACCCATACAGTCCAATCTTCAGGCT-3' (removes
XcmI); C258A, 5'-CAACTGGAATGCTGACCTGGACTTGTCTGA-3' (adds
BsMI); and C267A,
5'-CTGGACTTGTCTGAAAGTGAGGCCAACCCCAAATATTCTTTCCGGAGGC-3' (removes
TfiI).
Expression of P2X2 receptors. For
most experiments, P2X2 receptors were expressed
in defolliculated stage V-VI Xenopus laevis oocytes.
Oocytes were harvested by procedures approved by the University of
Michigan Committee on the Use and Care of Vertebrate Animals and have
been described in detail previously (Zhou and Hume, 1998 ).
P2X2 and mutant receptor RNA were synthesized
using the T7 mRNA message machine kit from Ambion (Austin, TX), and 50 nl of RNA (5-100 ng/µl) was injected into each oocyte. Two-electrode voltage-clamp experiments were performed 1-5 d after RNA injection.
For some experiments, we used whole-cell recording of transiently
transfected human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells. Cells plated
on 60 mm dishes were cotransfected with 1 µg of pcDNA3-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP), 3 µg of the
P2X2 mutant or wild-type plasmid, and 12 µl of
LipofectAMINE (Invitrogen, San Diego, CA), split the following
day, and recorded from 1 or 2 d after splitting.
Solutions. Our oocyte external recording solution contained
(in mM): 90 NaCl, 1 KCl, 1.3 MgCl2, and 10 HEPES, pH 7.5, and our pipette
solution contained 3 M KCl and 0.4 M EGTA, pH 7.5. For whole-cell recording from HEK
293 cells, our external solution contained (in
mM): 150 NaCl, 2 KCl, 1.5 MgCl2, 10 HEPES, and 10 glucose, pH 7.5, and our
internal recording solution contained (in mM):
145 CsCl, 1.3 MgCl2, 5 K2EGTA, 10 HEPES, and 10 glucose, pH 7.5. Disodium ATP (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) was dissolved at 100 mM in double-distilled H2O,
divided into aliquots, and stored at 20°C for 1-3 months. The 10 mM stock of ZnCl2 was
dissolved in acidic double-distilled H2O to
prevent precipitation. For recording, ATP stock solutions were diluted
in external recording solution with the required zinc and used within
48 hr. To compensate for the chelation of
Mg2+ by ATP, we added
MgCl2 to our solutions such that all solutions contained 1 mM free
Mg2+, as determined by the program Bound
and Determined (Brooks and Storey, 1992 ). After the pH was
adjusted to the required level, the ATP concentrations of all solutions
were verified by taking spectroscopic measurements at 259 nm.
Dithiothreitol (DTT) was obtained from Invitrogen, and solutions were
made fresh on the day of recording. [2-(Trimethylammonium)ethyl]
methanethiosulfonate bromide (MTSET) was obtained from
Toronto Research Chemicals (Toronto, Ontario, Canada), and MTSET
solutions were made within 30 min of use.
Electrophysiological recordings and data analysis.
P2X2 and mutant receptors expressed in
Xenopus oocytes were investigated by two-electrode voltage
clamp with either an npi TurboTec 3 (npi Electronics, Tamm, Germany) or
an Axon Instruments Geneclamp 500B (Axon Instruments, Foster City, CA).
The holding potential was 50 mV. The rate of
P2X2 receptor current desensitization is slow and
concentration dependent, varies between batches of oocytes, and
recovers slowly with a time constant of ~4 hr (Zhou et al., 1998 ).
Thus, obtaining concentration-response relationships for P2X2 receptors by sequentially applying higher
concentrations of ATP to the same oocytes is likely to cause
significant accumulation of desensitization. The resulting
concentration-response relationship will be that for a mixture of
desensitized and nondesensitized P2X2 receptors,
which will underestimate the EC50, because
desensitized receptors have a higher affinity for ATP. To minimize the
effects of desensitization on the concentration-response relationship, our strategy was to expose each oocyte to only two concentrations of
ATP: a small nondesensitizing concentration of ATP (approximately the
EC10), immediately followed by a test
concentration of ATP. For each test concentration of ATP, the ratio
between these current amplitudes was subsequently averaged among five
to seven oocytes (~40 oocytes per construct). The plot of these
average ratios was subsequently fitted using the Hill equation. For
graphical display, the ratios were renormalized to a maximum response
of 100%. This strategy makes no assumption about the recovery rate from desensitization and more accurately represents the response of the
nondesensitized receptors. Indeed, the EC50 we
obtained for wild-type P2X2 using this method was
130% of that obtained by estimating the EC50
with sequential 30 sec applications of ATP to single oocytes.
Because this protocol does not average the concentration-response
relationships of individual oocytes, the EC50 and
Hill coefficient are reported in Table 1
as the mean value and SE of the regression from Sigma Plot 7.0. To test
whether the fits to the concentration-response relationships of two
constructs were statistically different, we performed an F
test. This test compares the residuals derived from fitting the average
ratios to two separate Hill equations with the residuals derived from
fitting the ratios to a single Hill equation. A p value
of < 0.01 was considered to be significant. This statistical
approach does not independently test whether the significant
differences were a result of a change in
EC50 values, Hill coefficients, or both. To test
whether the EC50 values of mutants were
significantly different from those of wild-type P2X2, we studied the responses of a series of
oocytes expressing mutant or wild-type receptors to sequential
application of increasing concentrations of ATP. Although, as noted
above, this method underestimates the true EC50,
it has the advantage that it yields an independent estimate of the
EC50 and Hill coefficient from each oocyte and thus allowed a t test to be used to compare the mutants with
the wild type. The conclusion reached from this analysis
was that in all cases in which a significant difference between a
mutant and the wild type was indicated by the F test, the
cause was a change in the EC50. To avoid the
confusion of having two different EC50 values and
Hill coefficients quoted in Results for each mutant, these data are not
shown. However, because of these results, the asterisks and number
signs indicating significant differences in Table 1 are placed in the
column for EC50 values, rather than in the column
for Hill coefficients.
To compare the maximum response of each mutant in oocytes, we examined
the response of oocytes injected with a saturating amount of RNA (5 ng
per oocyte) after 2 d of incubation and measured the current
amplitude in response to 2 mM ATP. All data shown are from
the same batch of oocytes. To compare the maximum response of each
mutant in HEK 293 cells, we measured the response of cells to 5 mM ATP 2 d after transfection. To control for
varying transfection efficiencies between dishes and among cells, we
recorded only from cells that were brightly fluorescent because of the
EGFP marker that was cotransfected. As judged by eye, the intensity of
the EGFP was similar for all of the mutants tested.
For experiments in which the modulation of receptors was examined, the
zinc potentiation ratio reported is the ratio of the current amplitude
in the presence of ATP and zinc to the amplitude in the presence of ATP
alone. Similarly, the pH potentiation ratio reported is the ratio of
the current amplitude in the presence of ATP at a pH of 6.5 to that at
a pH of 7.5. Zinc potentiation and pH potentiation are both allosteric
regulatory mechanisms that left-shift the concentration-response
relationship to ATP but have little if any effect on the maximum
current (Wildman et al., 1998 ; Xiong et al., 1999 ). For instance, 10 µM ATP is approximately the EC10 at
a pH of 7.5 in the absence of zinc, but it is approximately the
EC80 in the presence of 20 µM zinc or at a pH of 6.5 (Clyne et al., 2002 ). Because the maximum response does not change, the potentiation ratio decreases as the concentration of ATP increases. To compare the magnitude of potentiation between mutants, it is therefore necessary to select a concentration of ATP
that produces a small and equivalent response in the absence of the
potentiating substance. In all experiments, we used a concentration of
ATP that approximated the EC10 at a pH of 7.5 with no zinc (estimated from the parameters shown in Table 1) as our
basal condition. Student's t tests were used to determine
whether population means differed, with significance taken to be
p < 0.01. All data are expressed as the mean ± SEM, unless otherwise specified.
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RESULTS |
Effect of DTT and MTSET on the response of P2X2
receptors to ATP and zinc
As an initial test of whether P2X2 receptors
contain disulfide bonds necessary for receptor function, we examined
the effects of a reducing agent, DTT, on P2X2
receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes. In agreement with
previous reports (Li et al., 1997 ; Rassendren et al., 1997 ), a 5-10
min incubation in 10 mM DTT had no effect on the
current amplitudes of P2X2 receptors in response to 10 µM ATP (mean current amplitude after DTT
was 104 ± 8% of the current amplitudes before treatment;
n = 9) (Fig.
1A). Thus, P2X2 receptors do not contain DTT-susceptible
disulfide bonds that significantly affect the response to ATP.

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Figure 1.
Effect of DTT and MTSET on P2X2
receptor currents. A, A 5 min incubation with 10 mM DTT did not affect the current responses of oocytes
expressing P2X2 to 10 µM ATP.
B, The response of P2X2 receptors to 10 µM ATP was potentiated fourfold by 5 µM
zinc, and a 5 min incubation with 1 mM MTSET did not affect
the potentiation of P2X2 receptor currents by 5 µM zinc. C, Potentiation of
P2X2 receptor currents by 5 µM zinc was
reduced but not eliminated by a 5 min incubation with 10 mM
DTT followed by a 2 min wash. D, Recovery of zinc
potentiation after treatment with DTT. The closed
circles show the potentiation of P2X2 receptor
responses to 10 µM ATP by 5 µM zinc after a
5 min incubation with 10 mM DTT and variable wash times
(n = 5-8 per time point; the error bars were
smaller than the size of the circles). For comparison,
the average zinc potentiation of P2X2 receptors is shown as
an open circle at the first time point and extrapolated
as a dashed line for other time points
(n = 7).
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P2X2 receptor currents are potentiated by the
binding of zinc to the extracellular domain (Nakazawa and Ohno, 1997 ;
Nakazawa et al., 1997 ; Miller et al., 1998 ; Wildman et al., 1998 ; Xiong et al., 1999 ). One way that cysteines might play a role in zinc potentiation is by acting as part of the zinc-binding site. We tested
this hypothesis by examining whether the sulfhydryl reagent MTSET could
block zinc potentiation. Limiting the amount of desensitization was
essential in these experiments, because they required repeated applications of ATP to single oocytes. We therefore used 5 µM zinc, a concentration that gave submaximal
potentiation but caused little desensitization (Fig.
1B). When 10 µM ATP was used,
5 µM zinc potentiated the current amplitudes of
P2X2 receptors by threefold to fivefold (mean
fold potentiation, 4.01 ± 0.1; n = 46). Maximal potentiation was achieved with 20 µM zinc (mean
fold potentiation, 11.2 ± 1.1; n = 35), but these
responses showed substantial desensitization (Fig.
2). Zinc potentiation to 5 µM ATP was not reduced after incubation in 1 mM MTSET for 5 min (Fig. 1B).
As a positive control for the effectiveness of MTSET, we used a mutant
P2X2 receptor containing a cysteine substitution
at I328. As reported previously (Rassendren et al., 1997 ; Egan et al.,
1998 ; Stoop et al., 1999 ), incubation in 1 mM MTSET for 5 min was sufficient to cause a
57 ± 3% reduction of I328C receptor currents in response to 1 µM ATP (n = 6). Thus, either
free cysteines are not part of the zinc binding site or MTSET cannot
gain access to the zinc binding site.

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Figure 2.
Zinc potentiation was greatly reduced or
eliminated in seven cysteine mutants. A, Zinc
potentiation of ATP-induced currents of single oocytes expressing
wild-type and mutant receptors. The ATP concentration used for each
mutant (~EC10) is indicated in B.
The zinc concentration was 20 µM. B, Mean
zinc potentiation ratio of 6-19 oocytes per construct. The zinc
potentiation ratio is the ratio of the current amplitude in the
presence of ATP and 20 µM zinc to the current amplitude
of ATP alone. The dashed line indicates no
potentiation. Asterisks indicate values significantly
different from wild type (p < 0.01).
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A third potential role for the conserved cysteines is to form disulfide
bonds essential for modulatory actions but not for the basic response
to ATP. We therefore examined zinc potentiation of
P2X2 receptor currents after treatment with DTT.
Exposure of P2X2 receptors to 10 mM
DTT for 5 min, followed by a 2 min wash, reduced the zinc potentiation
ratio by 40% to 2.6 ± 0.2 (n = 8) (Fig.
1C). Shorter wash times also reduced but never eliminated zinc potentiation (Fig. 1D). Because DTT has a high
affinity for zinc (Kd = 10 10.3) (Cornell and Crivaro,
1972 ), the decreased potentiation to zinc immediately after DTT
treatment might result from residual DTT chelating some of the zinc in
the test solutions. However, the time course of recovery of zinc
potentiation ( = 5.2 ± 1.2 min) was much slower than our
bath exchange speed ( ~ 5 sec), suggesting that some of the
effects of DTT on zinc potentiation might be attributable to the
disruption of one or more disulfide bonds, with the slow time course of
recovery representing the time course of re-formation of these bonds.
To test this idea, we added MTSET shortly after DTT treatment, because
cysteines bound with MTSET cannot re-form disulfide bonds. After
exposing P2X2 receptors to 10 mM DTT for 5 min, we washed the oocytes for 1 min
(so that residual DTT did not cleave MTSET from any cysteines it
encountered) before exposing them to 1 mM MTSET
for 5 min. We subsequently allowed for an additional minute of wash
before testing for zinc potentiation to ensure that residual free MTSET
did not chelate zinc. The zinc potentiation ratio of these receptors
exposed to DTT and then MTSET was 77 ± 5% (n = 5) of the initial zinc potentiation ratio before treatment, equivalent
to the percentage of recovery (77 ± 3%; n = 5)
of receptors treated with DTT followed by a 7 min wash in bath
recording solution. Thus, if the decrease in zinc potentiation after
DTT treatment is attributable to disruption of a disulfide bond and
recovery is attributable to re-formation of this bond, then the
resulting free cysteines must be buried and inaccessible to MTSET.
Perhaps a simpler explanation is that this effect of DTT does not act
through changes in disulfide bonds.
Effect of cysteine mutations on the concentration-response
relationships to ATP
To directly test the necessity of the 10 cysteines in the
extracellular domain of P2X receptors, we constructed
P2X2 mutant receptors, each of which contained an
alanine substituted for one of the 10 conserved cysteines. Nine of the
10 mutants were functional in oocytes, and all 10 were functional in
HEK 293 cells. To compare the levels of expression, we studied a group
of oocytes or HEK 293 cells in which all of the cells were from a
single batch and all recordings were made at a fixed time (2 d after RNA injection or DNA transfection). In both expression systems, the
maximum current that could be obtained from the mutant receptors in
response to a high concentration of ATP was smaller than for the wild
type (Table 1). Six of the mutants (C113A, C124A, C130A, C147A, C158A,
and C164A) gave currents that were ~25% of wild type (range
11-42%) in both expression systems. One mutant (C258A) gave small
currents (~5% of wild type) when expressed in HEK 293 cells but
somewhat larger currents (~25% of wild type) when expressed in
oocytes. The remaining three mutants (C214A, C224A, and C267A) gave
very small or undetectable currents (<4% of wild type) in both
expression systems. Indeed, for ATP concentrations up to 5 mM, we never detected any currents from oocytes expressing
two independent isolates of the C224A mutation or from the more
conservative C224S mutation. It should be noted that when high
concentrations of RNA were used and >2 d was allowed for receptor
expression in oocytes, the maximum current continued to increase beyond
the amplitudes shown in Table 1, and that for some of the oocytes illustrated in Figures 2 and 3, the
maximal currents were greater than 50 µA.

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Figure 3.
Zinc-resistant mutants were significantly
potentiated by acidic pH (a pH of 6.5). A, Potentiation
of ATP-induced currents of single oocytes expressing wild-type and
mutant receptors by acidic pH. The ATP concentration used for each
mutant (~EC10) is indicated in B
and for each mutant was the same concentration as used to test zinc
potentiation in Figure 2. B, Mean potentiation of 6-19
oocytes per construct. The pH potentiation ratio is the ratio of the
current amplitude in the presence of ATP at a pH of 6.5 to the current
amplitude in the presence of ATP at a pH of 7.5. The dashed
line indicates no potentiation. Asterisks
indicate potentiation ratios significantly different from wild type
(p < 0.01).
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We decided to perform a more detailed characterization of mutant
receptor properties in oocytes, because the currents from the C224A
mutant were too small to perform accurate studies in either system, and
the currents from the other mutants gave a better signal-to-noise ratio
in the oocyte recordings. The concentration-response relationships of
the nine mutant receptors characterized in oocytes (Fig.
4, Table 1) fell into three groups: (1)
two mutations (C258A and C267A) did not significantly alter the
EC50 from that of wild type, (2) five mutations
(C124A, C130A, C147A, C158A, and C214A) significantly increased the
EC50 (by ~12-fold), and (3) two mutations (C113A and C164A) caused a significantly larger increase in the EC50 (~25-fold) than the other seven mutations.
Thus, these mutations differentially affected the response of the
receptors to ATP. We subsequently examined whether these mutations also
had varying effects on the modulation of receptors.

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Figure 4.
The concentration-response
relationships for ATP of the cysteine mutants.
Concentration-response relationships were determined as
described in Materials and Methods. Each point represents the mean ± SEM. The EC50 and Hill coefficients of these fits are
summarized in Table 1.
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Effect of cysteine mutations on the zinc potentiation of
receptor currents
The failure of MTSET to block zinc potentiation argues that
cysteines are unlikely to be directly involved in binding to zinc. Even
so, some of the conserved cysteines might form disulfide bonds
essential for the receptor to fold into a conformation that has a
proper zinc-binding site. We therefore examined the effects of the C to
A mutations on zinc potentiation. As explained in Materials and
Methods, it was important that the concentration of ATP used in these
experiments be at approximately the EC10 of the
concentration-response relationship at a pH of 7.5 in the absence of
zinc, which varied among the mutants. Because there was no need to
minimize desensitization in these experiments, we used 20 µM zinc, which produced maximal potentiation in wild-type P2X2.
Two mutations (C267A and C258A) were similar to wild type in that they
showed dramatic potentiation in response to 20 µM zinc. Two other mutations (C113A and C164A) gave currents that showed small
but significant potentiation to zinc. The remaining cysteine mutations
(C124A, C130A, C147A, C158A, and C214A) showed no zinc potentiation or
slight inhibition by 20 µM zinc. In wild-type P2X2, a separate zinc-dependent inhibitory
process dominates over potentiation at higher concentrations of zinc
(Clyne et al., 2002 ). This inhibition of current in response to high
concentrations of zinc (>100 µM) was also present in the
C to A mutants. Therefore, it was not possible to determine whether the
zinc site associated with potentiation had been eliminated in
these mutants or simply shifted to a lower affinity. It seems likely
that partial occupancy of the low-affinity site for zinc inhibition in
the absence of a high-affinity site for zinc potentiation accounts
for the observed inhibition of current by 20 µM zinc
in the C124A, C130A, and C147A mutants.
Effect of cysteine mutations on the pH potentiation of
receptor currents
To test whether these mutations differentially disrupt the ability
of P2X2 receptors to respond to other modifiers
of channel gating, we looked at the effects of extracellular pH (Fig.
3). Lowering the pH of the extracellular solution potentiates
P2X2 receptor currents (King et al., 1996 , 1997 ;
Nakazawa et al., 1997 ; Wildman et al., 1998 ). In our solutions, the
relationship between pH and the response of P2X2
receptors to 10 µM ATP had a pKa of 7.0 (data not shown), which is similar to the values reported by others
(King et al., 1996 , 1997 ; Nakazawa et al., 1997 ; Wildman et al., 1998 ).
In agreement with other reports, we also found that a very acidic pH
( 5.5) inhibits P2X2 receptor currents (Wildman et al., 1998 ). We therefore used a pH of 6.5 for these studies, and
used the same concentrations of ATP that were used to study zinc
potentiation (~EC10 at a pH of 7.5). In
contrast to the loss of zinc potentiation in seven mutants, all nine
functional mutants were significantly potentiated by an acidic pH
(although C130A, C158A, and C258A showed slightly less potentiation
than wild type). The ability to observe substantial pH potentiation in
all mutants demonstrates that the failure to observe zinc potentiation
in seven mutants was not because we chose an inappropriate
concentration of ATP or had saturated our recording apparatus.
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DISCUSSION |
In this study, we used site-directed mutagenesis to investigate
the necessity of the 10 cysteine residues in the extracellular domain
of P2X2 receptors. Because these cysteines are
conserved in all known P2X receptors, we suspected that they might play an essential role in receptor function. To our great surprise, all 10 alanine-substituted cysteine mutants produced functional receptors in
HEK 293 cells, and nine were functional in Xenopus oocytes.
Compared with wild-type P2X2, the ATP
concentration-response relationships of nine mutants in oocytes were
either right-shifted (C113A, C124A, C130A, C147A, C158A, C164A, and
C214A) or unaltered (C258A and C267A). The currents for C224A in HEK
293 cells were too small to accurately determine the
EC50, but because no currents were seen until the
ATP concentration was >200 µM, the
concentration-response relationship of this mutant was also greatly
right-shifted.
Zinc-binding site of P2X2 receptors is unlikely to
contain cysteine residues
The first indication that the zinc-binding site lacks free
cysteines is that the sulfhydryl-modifying reagent MTSET failed to
block potentiation by zinc. Given the coordination chemistry of zinc
binding sites, an MTSET bound to a cysteine in the binding site would
be incompatible with zinc binding, so either there are no free
cysteines or any free cysteines are accessible to zinc but not MTSET.
The latter is not simply a formal possibility but a very real one,
because we have shown recently that two histidines of
P2X2 are essential for zinc modulation, although
treating these receptors with the histidyl-modifying reagent DEPC has
no effect on zinc potentiation (Clyne et al., 2002 ). To clarify this
issue, it was necessary to examine the effects of the cysteine
mutations on zinc modulation.
One might expect that mutating a residue in the zinc-binding site would
eliminate zinc potentiation without altering other receptor properties
greatly. Indeed, we demonstrated recently that mutating either one of
two histidines (H120 and H213) gave exactly this result (Clyne et al.,
2002 ). However, all seven mutations that decreased or eliminated
potentiation to 20 µM zinc (C113, C124, C130, C147, C158,
C164, and C214) caused significant increases in the
EC50 for ATP. We therefore believe that the
alteration in zinc potentiation in these seven mutants is most likely
secondary to more general structural changes in the mutant receptors,
rather than attributable to a direct role of any of these cysteines in binding zinc.
Two mutations (C258A and C267A) had little effect on the ATP
concentration-response relationships and thus may not cause as dramatic structural changes as the others. Although mutating C267 slightly increased zinc potentiation and mutating C258 slightly decreased zinc potentiation, neither mutation produced an effect similar to mutating the key histidines identified by Clyne et al.
(2002) . In summary, we present evidence that none of the cysteines are
likely to be involved in zinc binding.
Potential assignment of disulfide bonds to specific
cysteine pairs
The 10 conserved cysteines of P2X2 receptors
have been proposed to form disulfide bonds, but this had not been
tested previously. Presumably, these are intramolecular disulfide
bonds, because P2X receptors can dissociate into monomers under
nonreducing conditions (Nicke et al., 1998 ). If we assume that the
dominant effect of a cysteine mutation is caused by the disruption of a
disulfide bond, then mutating the other cysteine that shares this
disulfide bond should produce a receptor with similar properties.
Therefore, by comparing the similarity of the mutant receptors, we can
tentatively assign disulfide bonds to specific cysteine pairs. This
analysis, however, requires that breaking different disulfide bonds
creates discernibly different effects.
The concentration-response relationships of C113A and C164A were much
more right-shifted than those of the other seven functional cysteine
mutants. In addition, C113A and C164A showed small but significant
potentiation by 20 µM zinc, a property not shared by the
other five right-shifted mutants. The amplitude of the maximal currents
and the potentiation of C113A and C164A receptor currents by pH were
similar to each other. On the basis of these criteria, we suggest that
C113 and C164 may form a disulfide bond.
Only two cysteine mutants (C258A and C267A) had ATP
concentration-response relationships similar to those of wild-type
P2X2. Although the maximum responses of these
mutants differed from each other in oocytes, both had dramatically
reduced currents in HEK 293 cells. C158A and C267A were both
potentiated by pH and were the only two mutants with currents
potentiated more than threefold by zinc. Thus, C258 and C267 are
candidates to form a second disulfide bond.
Four cysteine mutants (C124A, C130A, C147A, and C158A) were quite
similar in their level of expression, EC50,
failure to potentiate to zinc, and potentiation in response to a shift
to a pH of 6.5. These four residues are excellent candidates to form
two more disulfide bonds, but there is no basis on which to suggest the specific pairing.
A striking feature that C214A and C224A shared was that both gave
currents much smaller than the other mutants in both expression systems. Furthermore, C214A differed from the other four mutants with
moderately right-shifted concentration-response relationships (C124A, C130A, C147A, and C158A) in that it had an
EC50 closer to that of wild type. The currents
from the C224A mutant were too small to characterize in detail in
either system, but this mutant clearly had a concentration-response
relationship that was substantially right-shifted. Therefore, C214 and
C224 are potential candidates to form a fifth disulfide bond.
Reconciling the effects of DTT and single amino
acid substitutions
The results described above suggest that disrupting any one of
five disulfide bonds significantly destabilizes the receptor. If this
is correct, then the finding that DTT had no effect on the ATP-induced
current amplitudes of wild-type receptors in this study and others (Li
et al., 1997 ; Rassendren et al., 1997 ) might be interpreted as meaning
that in the mature receptor, these disulfides are inaccessible to DTT.
A similar inaccessibility of DTT has been suggested for the disulfide
bonds in the inwardly rectifying K+
channel Kir 2.1 (Cho et al., 2000 ). This is also consistent with the
generalization that disulfides are often accessible to reducing agents
only after exposure to denaturing agents (Creighton, 1988 ).
Another possibility is that the structural changes that result from
disrupting the accessible disulfide bonds in the mature folded receptor
are less severe than the changes that result when the receptor folds in
the absence of a bond, as occurs for the mutant receptors. For example,
the greatly reduced maximum response of C214A and C224A might indicate
that they form a disulfide bond necessary to stabilize a folding
intermediate that allows other disulfide bonds to form or other
posttranslational modifications (e.g., glycosylation) to occur.
Furthermore, we cannot exclude the possibility that disulfide bonds in
P2X2 receptors rearrange during protein folding
and that the above cysteine pairs represent these transient disulfide
bonds, which might be more critical than the final bonds of the mature receptor.
In summary, our results suggest that the 10 conserved cysteines in
P2X2 receptors have no direct role in zinc or pH
potentiation but form five intramolecular disulfide bonds. By assuming
that mutating either cysteine of a disulfide bond should have a similar effect on the receptor, we propose that the rat
P2X2 receptor contains disulfide bonds between
C113-C164, C258-C267, and C214-C224 and that two additional bonds
exist among C124, C130, C147, and C158 (Fig.
5). Gratifyingly, the same cysteine
pairings were recently proposed for the human
P2X1 receptor in an article published while this
article was in press (Ennion and Evans, 2002 ). Although these cysteine
pairs may represent the cysteine pairs present during protein
processing, the simplest interpretation is that these are the final
cysteine pairings in the mature protein. If so, then we can now
identify a number of discontinuous regions in the primary sequence of
P2X receptors that are close to each other in the three-dimensional
structure. In addition to the five disulfide bonds suggested here, our
recent work on zinc modulation by histidines suggests that H120 and
H213 both contribute to the zinc binding site and so must be close
together (Clyne et al., 2002 ), and the work of Jiang et al. (2000) and
Ennion et al. (2000) suggests that positively charged lysine residues
at positions 69, 71, and 308 bind to the phosphates of ATP. These
predictions await additional tests by biochemical, biophysical, or
structural approaches.

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|
Figure 5.
Model of the P2X2 receptor. All of the
cysteines are shown as open circles. The solid
lines indicate three proposed disulfide bonds. The
dotted box connects four cysteines that are proposed to
form two additional disulfide bonds but among which we were unable to
predict the pattern of pairing. The black circles
indicate two histidines (120 and 213) that are suggested by Clyne et
al. (2002) to form part of a site that binds zinc (Zn). The
hatched circles indicate three lysines (69, 71, and 308)
suggested to bind to the phosphates of ATP (asterisks)
(Jiang et al., 2000 ; Ennion et al., 2002 ). The transmembrane domains
(residues F31 to V51 and I331 to L353) are represented as
cylinders, all other amino acids are indicated as
gray circles, and the three
N-glycosylation sites of P2X2 are shown as
Y shapes.
|
|
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received May 18, 2001; revised Feb. 28, 2002; accepted March 1, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant
NS-039196. We thank Richard Evans for sharing data reported by Ennion
et al. (2002) before publication and thank the members of the Hume
laboratory for comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Richard I. Hume, Department of
Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, 3095 Natural Science
Building, 830 North University Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. E-mail:
rhume{at}umich.edu.
 |
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