Identification of two amino acid residues in the ϵ subunit that promote mammalian muscle acetylcholine receptor assembly in COS cells

1991 
Abstract We have used a species difference in s subunits of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) to investigate regions of the subunit protein that are important in receptor assembly. Upon transient transfection of COS cells, mouse ϵ subunit cDNA is approximately 10 times more effective than that of the rat in supporting expression of surface AChRs when the other subunits are from either mouse or rat. In cells transfected with only α and ϵ subunit cDNAs, the formation of an αϵ heterodimer, a presumed assembly intermediate, is also less efficient with rat than with mouse ϵ subunit. By site-directed mutagenesis, we have found that these differences can be accounted for by 2 amino acid differences in the N-terminal domain at positions 106 and 115 of the rat and mouse ϵ subunits, suggesting that the region near these 2 amino acid residues is important for AChR assembly.
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