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XB-ART-14472
J Neurosci 1998 Aug 15;1816:6163-75. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.18-16-06163.1998.
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Control of voltage-independent zinc inhibition of NMDA receptors by the NR1 subunit.

Traynelis SF , Burgess MF , Zheng F , Lyuboslavsky P , Powers JL .


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Zinc inhibits NMDA receptor function through both voltage-dependent and voltage-independent mechanisms. In this report we have investigated the role that the NR1 subunit plays in voltage-independent Zn2+ inhibition. Our data show that inclusion of exon 5 into the NR1 subunit increases the IC50 for voltage-independent Zn2+ inhibition from 3-fold to 10-fold when full length exon 22 is also spliced into the mature NR1 transcript and the NMDA receptor complex contains the NR2A or NR2B subunits; exon 5 has little effect on Zn2+ inhibition of receptors that contain NR2C and NR2D. Mutagenesis within exon 5 indicates that the same residues that control proton inhibition, including Lys211, also control the effects of exon 5 on Zn2+ inhibition. Amino acid exchanges within the NR1 subunit but outside exon 5 (E181Q, E339Q, E342Q, N616R, N616Q, D669N, D669E, C744A, and C798A) that are known to decrease the pH sensitivity also decrease the Zn2+ sensitivity, and concentrations of spermine that relieve tonic proton inhibition also relieve Zn2+ inhibition. In summary, our results define the subunit composition of Zn2+-sensitive NMDA receptors and provide evidence for structural convergence of three allosteric regulators of receptor function: protons, polyamines, and Zn2+.

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Species referenced: Xenopus laevis
Genes referenced: grin1 grin2a grin2b grin2c grin2d nodal1

References [+] :
Aniksztejn, Selective release of endogenous zinc from the hippocampal mossy fibers in situ. 1987, Pubmed