GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity

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Standard

GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. / Søgaard, Rikke; Werge, Thomas Mears; Bertelsen, Camilla; Lundbye, Camilla; Madsen, Kenneth L; Nielsen, Claus H; Lundbaek, Jens A.

In: Biochemistry, Vol. 45, No. 43, 2006, p. 13118-29.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Søgaard, R, Werge, TM, Bertelsen, C, Lundbye, C, Madsen, KL, Nielsen, CH & Lundbaek, JA 2006, 'GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity', Biochemistry, vol. 45, no. 43, pp. 13118-29. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi060734+

APA

Søgaard, R., Werge, T. M., Bertelsen, C., Lundbye, C., Madsen, K. L., Nielsen, C. H., & Lundbaek, J. A. (2006). GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. Biochemistry, 45(43), 13118-29. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi060734+

Vancouver

Søgaard R, Werge TM, Bertelsen C, Lundbye C, Madsen KL, Nielsen CH et al. GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. Biochemistry. 2006;45(43):13118-29. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi060734+

Author

Søgaard, Rikke ; Werge, Thomas Mears ; Bertelsen, Camilla ; Lundbye, Camilla ; Madsen, Kenneth L ; Nielsen, Claus H ; Lundbaek, Jens A. / GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. In: Biochemistry. 2006 ; Vol. 45, No. 43. pp. 13118-29.

Bibtex

@article{3929c8c0b0f511df825b000ea68e967b,
title = "GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity",
abstract = "Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and other polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) promote GABA(A) receptor [(3)H]-muscimol binding, and DHA increases the rate of GABA(A) receptor desensitization. Triton X-100, a structurally unrelated amphiphile, similarly promotes [(3)H]-muscimol binding. The mechanism(s) underlying these effects are poorly understood. DHA and Triton X-100, at concentrations that affect GABA(A) receptor function, increase the elasticity of lipid bilayers measured as decreased bilayer stiffness using gramicidin channels as molecular force transducers. We have previously shown that membrane protein function can be regulated by amphiphile-induced changes in bilayer elasticity and hypothesized that GABA(A) receptors could be similarly regulated. We therefore studied the effects of four structurally unrelated amphiphiles that decrease bilayer stiffness (Triton X-100, octyl-beta-glucoside, capsaicin, and DHA) on GABA(A) receptor function in mammalian cells. All the compounds promoted GABA(A) receptor [(3)H]-muscimol binding by increasing the binding capacity of high-affinity binding without affecting the associated equilibrium binding constant. A semiquantitative analysis found a similar quantitative relation between the effects on bilayer stiffness and [(3)H]-muscimol binding. Membrane cholesterol depletion, which also decreases bilayer stiffness, similarly promoted [(3)H]-muscimol binding. In whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments, Triton X-100, octyl-beta-glucoside, capsaicin, and DHA all reduced the peak amplitude of the GABA-induced currents and increased the rate of receptor desensitization. The effects of the amphiphiles did not correlate with the expected changes in monolayer spontaneous curvature. We conclude that GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. PUFAs may generally regulate membrane protein function by affecting the elasticity of the host lipid bilayer.",
author = "Rikke S{\o}gaard and Werge, {Thomas Mears} and Camilla Bertelsen and Camilla Lundbye and Madsen, {Kenneth L} and Nielsen, {Claus H} and Lundbaek, {Jens A}",
note = "Keywords: Animals; CHO Cells; Capsaicin; Cell Line; Cricetinae; Cricetulus; Docosahexaenoic Acids; Glucosides; Humans; Ion Channels; Lipid Bilayers; Membrane Fluidity; Membrane Proteins; Muscimol; Octoxynol; Protein Binding; Receptors, GABA-A; Transfection; Tritium",
year = "2006",
doi = "10.1021/bi060734+",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "13118--29",
journal = "Biochemistry",
issn = "0006-2960",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "43",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity

AU - Søgaard, Rikke

AU - Werge, Thomas Mears

AU - Bertelsen, Camilla

AU - Lundbye, Camilla

AU - Madsen, Kenneth L

AU - Nielsen, Claus H

AU - Lundbaek, Jens A

N1 - Keywords: Animals; CHO Cells; Capsaicin; Cell Line; Cricetinae; Cricetulus; Docosahexaenoic Acids; Glucosides; Humans; Ion Channels; Lipid Bilayers; Membrane Fluidity; Membrane Proteins; Muscimol; Octoxynol; Protein Binding; Receptors, GABA-A; Transfection; Tritium

PY - 2006

Y1 - 2006

N2 - Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and other polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) promote GABA(A) receptor [(3)H]-muscimol binding, and DHA increases the rate of GABA(A) receptor desensitization. Triton X-100, a structurally unrelated amphiphile, similarly promotes [(3)H]-muscimol binding. The mechanism(s) underlying these effects are poorly understood. DHA and Triton X-100, at concentrations that affect GABA(A) receptor function, increase the elasticity of lipid bilayers measured as decreased bilayer stiffness using gramicidin channels as molecular force transducers. We have previously shown that membrane protein function can be regulated by amphiphile-induced changes in bilayer elasticity and hypothesized that GABA(A) receptors could be similarly regulated. We therefore studied the effects of four structurally unrelated amphiphiles that decrease bilayer stiffness (Triton X-100, octyl-beta-glucoside, capsaicin, and DHA) on GABA(A) receptor function in mammalian cells. All the compounds promoted GABA(A) receptor [(3)H]-muscimol binding by increasing the binding capacity of high-affinity binding without affecting the associated equilibrium binding constant. A semiquantitative analysis found a similar quantitative relation between the effects on bilayer stiffness and [(3)H]-muscimol binding. Membrane cholesterol depletion, which also decreases bilayer stiffness, similarly promoted [(3)H]-muscimol binding. In whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments, Triton X-100, octyl-beta-glucoside, capsaicin, and DHA all reduced the peak amplitude of the GABA-induced currents and increased the rate of receptor desensitization. The effects of the amphiphiles did not correlate with the expected changes in monolayer spontaneous curvature. We conclude that GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. PUFAs may generally regulate membrane protein function by affecting the elasticity of the host lipid bilayer.

AB - Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and other polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) promote GABA(A) receptor [(3)H]-muscimol binding, and DHA increases the rate of GABA(A) receptor desensitization. Triton X-100, a structurally unrelated amphiphile, similarly promotes [(3)H]-muscimol binding. The mechanism(s) underlying these effects are poorly understood. DHA and Triton X-100, at concentrations that affect GABA(A) receptor function, increase the elasticity of lipid bilayers measured as decreased bilayer stiffness using gramicidin channels as molecular force transducers. We have previously shown that membrane protein function can be regulated by amphiphile-induced changes in bilayer elasticity and hypothesized that GABA(A) receptors could be similarly regulated. We therefore studied the effects of four structurally unrelated amphiphiles that decrease bilayer stiffness (Triton X-100, octyl-beta-glucoside, capsaicin, and DHA) on GABA(A) receptor function in mammalian cells. All the compounds promoted GABA(A) receptor [(3)H]-muscimol binding by increasing the binding capacity of high-affinity binding without affecting the associated equilibrium binding constant. A semiquantitative analysis found a similar quantitative relation between the effects on bilayer stiffness and [(3)H]-muscimol binding. Membrane cholesterol depletion, which also decreases bilayer stiffness, similarly promoted [(3)H]-muscimol binding. In whole-cell voltage-clamp experiments, Triton X-100, octyl-beta-glucoside, capsaicin, and DHA all reduced the peak amplitude of the GABA-induced currents and increased the rate of receptor desensitization. The effects of the amphiphiles did not correlate with the expected changes in monolayer spontaneous curvature. We conclude that GABA(A) receptor function is regulated by lipid bilayer elasticity. PUFAs may generally regulate membrane protein function by affecting the elasticity of the host lipid bilayer.

U2 - 10.1021/bi060734+

DO - 10.1021/bi060734+

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 17059229

VL - 45

SP - 13118

EP - 13129

JO - Biochemistry

JF - Biochemistry

SN - 0006-2960

IS - 43

ER -

ID: 21593942