Photo-isomerizable tweezers to probe ionotropic receptor mechanisms

This page provides a sample of the publications of EURIDOL students and researchers of the Strasbourg Pain Initiative. Recent publications are presented first.

"Ligand-gated ion channels (LGIC, also referred to as ionotropic receptors) are important transmembrane proteins that open to allow ions to flow across the membrane and locally modify the membrane potential in response to the binding of a ligand. For more than a decade, a tremendous effort has been carried out in the determination of many LGIC structures in high resolution, leading to an unprecedented molecular description of channel gating. However, it is sometimes difficult to classify experimentally derived structures to their corresponding functional states, and alternative methods may help resolve or refine this issue. In this review, we focus on the application of photo-isomerizable tweezers (PIT) as a powerful strategy to interrogate molecular mechanisms of LGIC while assessing their functionality by electrophysiology."

Authors

Laurie Peverini, Kate Dunning, Francisco Andres Peralta, Thomas Grutter

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