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Fenster, C.P., Rains, M.F., Noerager, B., Quick, M.W. and
Lester, R.A.J. Influence of subunit composition on desensitization of nicotinic receptors
at low concentrations of nicotine. J. Neurosci. 17: 5747-5759, 1997.
The influence of alpha and beta subunits on the properties of nicotine-induced activation
and desensitization of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) expressed in
Xenopus oocytes was examined. Receptors containing alpha4 subunits were more sensitive to
activation by nicotine than alpha3-containing receptors. At low concentrations of
nicotine, nAChRs containing beta2 subunits reached near-maximal desensitization more
rapidly than beta4-containing receptors. The concentration of nicotine producing
half-maximal desensitization was influenced by the particular alpha subunit expressed;
similar to results for activation, alpha4-containing receptors were more sensitive to
desensitizing levels of nicotine than alpha3-containing receptors. The alpha subunit also
influenced the rate of recovery from desensitization; this rate was approximately
inversely proportional to the apparent nicotine affinity for the desensitized state. The
homomeric alpha7 receptor showed the lowest sensitivity to nicotine for both activation
and desensitization; alpha7 nAChRs also demonstrated the fastest desensitization kinetics.
These subunit-dependent properties remained in the presence of external calcium, although
subtle, receptor subtype-specific effects on both the apparent affinities for activation
and desensitization and the desensitization kinetics were noted. These data imply that the
subunit composition of various nAChRs determines the degree to which receptors are
desensitized and/or activated by tobacco-related levels of nicotine. The subtype-specific
balance between receptor activation and desensitization should be considered important
when the cellular and behavioral actions of nicotine are interpreted.
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