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Dive into the research topics where Nael A. McCarty is active.

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Featured researches published by Nael A. McCarty.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

State-dependent inhibition of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator chloride channels by a novel peptide toxin

Matthew D. Fuller; Chris Thompson; Zhi Ren Zhang; Cody S. Freeman; Eszter Schay; Gergely Szakács; Éva Bakos; Balázs Sarkadi; Denis McMaster; Robert J. French; Jan Pohl; Julia Kubanek; Nael A. McCarty

Peptide toxins from animal venom have been used for many years for the identification and study of cation-permeable ion channels. However, no peptide toxins have been identified that interact with known anion-selective channels, including cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the protein defective in cystic fibrosis and a member of the ABC transporter superfamily. Here, we describe the identification and initial characterization of a novel 3.7-kDa peptide toxin, GaTx1, which is a potent and reversible inhibitor of CFTR, acting from the cytoplasmic side of the membrane. Thus, GaTx1 is the first peptide toxin identified that inhibits a chloride channel of known molecular identity. GaTx1 exhibited high specificity, showing no effect on a panel of nine transport proteins, including Cl- and K+ channels, and ABC transporters. GaTx1-mediated inhibition of CFTR channel activity is strongly state-dependent; both potency and efficacy are reduced under conditions of elevated [ATP], suggesting that GaTx1 may function as a non-competitive inhibitor of ATP-dependent channel gating. This tool will allow the application of new quantitative approaches to study CFTR structure and function, particularly with respect to the conformational changes that underlie transitions between open and closed states.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2010

A Novel Bioassay for Detecting GPCR Heterodimerization Transactivation of Beta 2 Adrenergic Receptor by Bradykinin Receptor

Karla K. V. Haack; Michelle R. Tougas; Kymry T. Jones; Samir S. El-Dahr; Harish Radhakrishna; Nael A. McCarty

Many G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have been shown to form heteromeric complexes primarily by biochemical methods, including competitive radioligand binding assays or measurements of changes in second-messenger concentration in lysed cells. These results are often cell line specific, and the expression of other cell surface proteins makes it difficult to detect potential functional consequences of GPCR interaction. Here, 2-electrode voltage clamping in Xenopus oocytes was used as a bioassay to explore heterodimerization of bradykinin type 2 receptor (Bk2R) and beta 2 adrenergic receptor (β2AR), using chloride channels as outputs for receptor activation. The data show for the first time that these 2 receptors heterodimerize with functional consequences. Stimulation with bradykinin induced activation of Gαq- and transactivation of Gαs-coupled pathways in oocytes expressing Bk2R and β2AR. To corroborate these data, potential receptor interaction was examined in PC12 cells, a cell line that endogenously expresses both receptors, and confirmed that stimulation with bradykinin transactivates β2AR. In both oocytes and PC12 cells, transactivation was ablated by Bk2R or β2AR inverse agonists, suggesting that transactivation occurred directly through both receptors. This is the first evidence of Bk2R/β2AR physical interaction, forming a functional heterodimer. The oocyte system may prove highly useful for exploration of GPCR heterodimerization and the functional consequences thereof.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 2005

Inhibition of ClC-2 Chloride Channels by a Peptide Component or Components of Scorpion Venom

Chris Thompson; D.M. Fields; Pedro R. Olivetti; M.D. Fuller; Zhi-Ren Zhang; Julia Kubanek; Nael A. McCarty

ClC chloride channels play essential roles in membrane excitability and maintenance of osmotic balance. Despite the recent crystallization of two bacterial ClC-like proteins, the gating mechanism for these channels remains unclear. In this study we tested scorpion venom for the presence of novel peptide inhibitors of ClC channels, which might be useful tools for dissecting the mechanisms underlying ClC channel gating. Recently, it has been shown that a peptide component of venom from the scorpion L. quinquestriatus hebraeus inhibits the CFTR chloride channel from the intracellular side. Using two-electrode voltage clamp we studied the effect of scorpion venom on ClC-0, -1, and -2, and found both dose- and voltage-dependent inhibition only of ClC-2. Comparison of voltage-dependence of inhibition by venom to that of known pore blockers revealed opposite voltage dependencies, suggesting different mechanisms of inhibition. Kinetic data show that venom induced slower activation kinetics compared to pre-venom records, suggesting that the active component(s) of venom may function as a gating modifier at ClC-2. Trypsinization abolished the inhibitory activity of venom, suggesting that the component(s) of scorpion venom that inhibits ClC-2 is a peptide.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 2004

Time-dependent interactions of glibenclamide with CFTR: kinetically complex block of macroscopic currents.

Zhi-Ren Zhang; Guiying Cui; Shawn Zeltwanger; Nael A. McCarty

Blockade of the CFTR chloride channel by glibenclamide was studied in Xenopus oocytes using two-electrode voltage-clamp recordings, macropatch recordings, and summations of single-channel currents, in order to test a kinetic model recently developed by us from single-channel experiments. Both the forward and reverse macroscopic reactions, at negative and positive membrane potential VM, respectively, were slow in comparison to those reactions for other CFTR pore blockers such as DPC and NPPB, resulting in prominent relaxations on the order of tens of milliseconds. The rate of the reverse reaction was voltage-dependent, and dependent on the Cl− driving force, while that of the forward reaction was not. In inside-out macropatches, block and relief from block occurred in two distinct phases that differed in apparent affinity. The results are consistent with the presence of multiple glibenclamide binding sites in CFTR, with varying affinity and voltage dependence; they support the kinetic model and suggest experimental approaches for identification of those sites by mutagenesis.


Journal of Molecular Signaling | 2008

Differential role of beta-arrestin ubiquitination in agonist-promoted down-regulation of M 1 vs M 2 muscarinic acetylcholine receptors

Valerie A Mosser; Kymry T. Jones; Katie Hoffman; Nael A. McCarty; Darrell A. Jackson

Background Sustained agonist-promoted ubiquitination of β-arrestin has been correlated with increased stability of the GPCR – β-arrestin complex. Moreover, abrogation of β-arrestin ubiquitination has been reported to inhibit receptor internalization with minimal effects on receptor degradation. Results Herein we report that agonist activation of M1 mAChRs produces a sustained β-arrestin ubiquitination but no stable co-localization with β-arrestin. In contrast, sustained ubiquitination of β-arrestin by activation of M2 mAChRs does result in stable co-localization between the M2 mAChR and β-arrestin. Internalization of receptors was unaffected by proteasome inhibitors, but down-regulation was significantly reduced, suggesting a role for the ubiquitination machinery in promoting down-regulation of the receptors. Given the ubiquitination status of β-arrestin following agonist treatment, we sought to determine the effects of β-arrestin ubiquitination on M1 and M2 mAChR down-regulation. A constitutively ubiquitinated β-arrestin 2 chimera in which ubiquitin is fused to the C-terminus of β-arrestin 2 (YFP-β-arrestin 2-Ub) significantly increased agonist-promoted down-regulation of both M1 and M2 mAChRs, with the effect substantially higher on the M2 mAChR. Based on this observation, we were interested in examining the effects of disruption of potential ubiquitination sites in the β-arrestin sequence on receptor down-regulation. Agonist-promoted internalization of the M2 mAChR was not affected by expression of β-arrestin lysine mutants lacking putative ubiquitination sites, β-arrestin 2K18R, K107R, K108R, K207R, K296R, while down-regulation and stable co-localiztion of the receptor with this β-arrestin lysine mutant were significantly reduced. Interestingly, expression of β-arrestin 2K18R, K107R, K108R, K207R, K296R increased the agonist-promoted down-regulation of the M1 mAChR but did not result in a stable co-localiztion of the receptor with this β-arrestin lysine mutant. Conclusion These findings indicate that ubiquitination of β-arrestin has a distinct role in the differential trafficking and degradation of M1 and M2 mAChRs.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2003

Transient transfection of polarized epithelial monolayers with CFTR and reporter genes using efficacious lipids

Torry A. Tucker; Karoly Varga; Zsuzsa Bebok; Akos Zsembery; Nael A. McCarty; James F. Collawn; Erik M. Schwiebert; Lisa M. Schwiebert


Pediatric Pulmonology | 2002

A phase I randomized, multicenter trial of CPX in adult subjects with mild cystic fibrosis*

Nael A. McCarty; T. A. Standaert; Mary E. Teresi; Cynthia Tuthill; Janice L. Launspach; Thomas J. Kelley; Laura J H Milgram; Kathleen A. Hilliard; Warren E. Regelmann; Mark R. Weatherly; Moira L. Aitken; Michael W. Konstan; Richard C. Ahrens


Biophysical Journal | 2004

CFTR: a cysteine at position 338 in TM6 senses a positive electrostatic potential in the pore.

Xuehong Liu; Zhi Ren Zhang; Matthew D. Fuller; Joshua Billingsley; Nael A. McCarty; David C. Dawson


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Determination of the functional unit of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator chloride channel. One polypeptide forms one pore.

Zhi Ren Zhang; Guiying Cui; Xuehong Liu; Binlin Song; David C. Dawson; Nael A. McCarty


Biophysical Journal | 2005

The Block of CFTR by Scorpion Venom is State-Dependent

Matthew D. Fuller; Zhi-Ren Zhang; Guiying Cui; Nael A. McCarty

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Guiying Cui

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Zhi-Ren Zhang

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Julia Kubanek

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Karoly Varga

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Torry A. Tucker

University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler

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Zhi Ren Zhang

Medical University of South Carolina

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