The Om-toxins are short peptides (23-27 amino acids) purified from the venom of the scorpion Opisthacanthus madagascariensis. Their pharmacological targets are thought to be potassium channels. Like Csalpha/beta (cystine-stabilized alpha/beta) toxins, the Om-toxins alter the electrophysiological properties of these channels; however, they do not share any sequence similarity with other scorpion toxins. We herein demonstrate by electrophysiological experiments that Om-toxins decrease the amplitude of the K+ current of the rat channels Kv1.1 and Kv1.2, as well as human Kv1.3. We also determine the solution structure of three of the toxins by use of two-dimensional proton NMR techniques followed by distance geometry and molecular dynamics. The structures of these three peptides display an uncommon fold for ion-channel blockers, Csalpha/alpha (cystine-stabilized alpha-helix-loop-helix), i.e. two alpha-helices connected by a loop and stabilized by two disulphide bridges. We compare the structures obtained and the dipole moments resulting from the electrostatic anisotropy of these peptides with those of the only other toxin known to share the same fold, namely kappa-hefutoxin1.
In a previous study we have shown that llama VHH antibody fragments are able to bind their antigen after a heat shock of 90°C, in contrast to the murine monoclonal antibodies. However, the molecular mechanism by which antibody:antigen interaction occurs under these extreme conditions remains unclear. To examine in more detail the structural and thermodynamic aspects of the binding mechanism, an extensive CD, ITC, and NMR study was initiated. In this study the interaction between the llama VHH -R2 fragment and its antigen, the dye Reactive Red-6 (RR6) has been explored. The data show clearly that most of the VHH-R2 population at 80°C is in an unfolded conformation. In contrast, CD spectra representing the complex between VHH-R2 and the dye remained the same up to 80°C. Interestingly, addition of the dye to the denatured VHH-R2 at 80°C yielded the spectrum of the native complex. These results suggest an induced refolding of denatured VHH-R2 by its antigen under these extreme conditions. This induced refolding showed some similarities with the well established "induced fit" mechanism of antibodyantigen interactions at ambient temperature. However, the main difference with the "induced fit" mechanism is that at the start of the addition of the antigen most of the VHH molecules are in an unfolded conformation. The refolding capability under these extreme conditions and the stable complex formation make VHHs useful in a wide variety of applications. Proteins 2005;59:555-564.
Maurotoxin (MTX) is a 34-residue toxin that has been isolated from the venom of the chactidae scorpion
Maurotoxin (MTX) and HsTx1 are two scorpion toxins belonging to the ␣-KTx6 structural family. These 34-residue toxins, cross-linked by four disulfide bridges, share 59% sequence identity and fold along the classical ␣/ scaffold. Despite these structural similarities, they fully differ in their pharmacological profiles. MTX is highly active on small (SK) and intermediate (IK) conductance Ca 2؉ -activated (K ؉ ) channels and on voltage-gated Kv1.2 channel, whereas HsTx1 potently blocks voltagegated Kv1.1 and Kv1.3 channels only. Here, we designed and chemically produced MTX-HsTx1, a chimera of both toxins that contains the N-terminal helical region of MTX (sequence 1-16) and the C-terminal -sheet region of HsTx1 (sequence 17-34). The three-dimensional structure of the peptide in solution was solved by 1 H NMR. MTX-HsTx1 displays the activity of MTX on SK channel, whereas it exhibits the pharmacological profile of HsTx1 on Kv1.1, Kv1.2, Kv1.3, and IK channels. These data demonstrate that the helical region of MTX exerts a key role in SK channel recognition, whereas the -sheet region of HsTx1 is crucial for activity on all other channel types tested.
Animal toxins block voltage-dependent potassium channels (Kv) either by occluding the conduction pore (pore blockers) or by modifying the channel gating properties (gating modifiers). Gating modifiers of Kv channels bind to four equivalent extracellular sites near the S3 and S4 segments, close to the voltage sensor. Phrixotoxins are gating modifiers that bind preferentially to the closed state of the channel and fold into the Inhibitory Cystine Knot structural motif. We have solved the solution structure of Phrixotoxin 1, a gating modifier of Kv4 potassium channels. Analysis of the molecular surface and the electrostatic anisotropy of Phrixotoxin 1 and of other toxins acting on voltage-dependent potassium channels allowed us to propose a toxin interacting surface that encompasses both the surface from which the dipole moment emerges and a neighboring hydrophobic surface rich in aromatic residues.Keywords: Phrixotoxin 1; NMR; spider toxin; structure determination; potassium channel gating modifier Spider venoms are complex mixtures of toxic peptides, proteins, and low-molecular-mass organic molecules (Escoubas et al. 2000b). Their pharmacological properties are due to the interaction of the venom components with cellular receptors, particularly with ion channels, leading to cellular dysfunction. Spider venoms have proven to be a rich source of highly specific peptide ligands for selected subtypes of potassium, sodium, and calcium channels. The discovery in the venom of the spider Grammostola spatulata (Araneae: Theraphosidae ס tarantulas) of the hanatoxins, the first toxins acting on the Kv2.1 voltage-dependent potassium channels (Swartz and MacKinnon 1995) first indicated the potential of spider venoms as a source of potassium channel modulators. Hanatoxins are peptides of 35 amino acids cross-linked by three-disulfide bridges and act in a voltagedependent manner by modifying the gating properties of Kv2.1 and to some extent of Kv4.2 potassium channels. They were proposed to bind to four equivalent extracellular channel sites near the S3 and S4 segments, close to the voltage sensor (Swartz and MacKinnon 1997a,b; Li-Smerin and Swartz 2000), thus affecting transmembrane movement of the voltage-sensing domain in response to depolarizing voltages. The first described toxin blockers of Kv4 channels were the heteropodatoxins isolated from the venom of Heteropoda venatoria (Araneae: Sparassidae; Sanguinetti et al. Article and publication are at http://www.proteinscience.org/cgi
PMP-D2 and HI, two peptides from Locusta migratoria, were shown to belong to the family of tight-binding protease inhibitors. However, they interact weakly with bovine trypsin (K(i) around 100 nM) despite a trypsin-specific Arg at the primary specificity site P1. Here we demonstrate that they are potent inhibitors of midgut trypsins isolated from the same insect and of a fungal trypsin from Fusarium oxysporum (K(i)
The membrane disruption mechanism of pandinin 1 (pin1), an antimicrobial peptide isolated from the venom of the African scorpion, was studied using 31P, 13C, 1H solid-state and multidimensional solution-state NMR spectroscopy. A high-resolution NMR solution structure of pin1 showed that the two distinct alpha-helical regions move around the central hinge region, which contains Pro19. 31P NMR spectra of lipid membrane in the presence of pin1, at various temperatures, showed that pin1 induces various lipid phase behaviors depending on the acyl chain length and charge of phospholipids. Notably, it was found that pin1 induced formation of the cubic phase in shorter lipid membranes above Tm. Further, the 13C NMR spectra of pin1 labeled at Leu28 under magic angle spinning (MAS) indicated that the motion of pin1 bound to the lipid bilayer was very slow, with a correlation time of the order of 10(-3) s. 31P NMR spectra of dispersions of four saturated phosphatidyl-cholines in the presence of three types of pin1 derivatives, [W4A, W6A, W15A]-pin1, pin1(1-18), and pin1(20-44), at various temperatures demonstrated that all three pin1 derivatives have a reduced ability to trigger the cubic phase. 13C chemical shift values for pin1(1-18) labeled at Val3, Ala10, or Ala11 under static or slow MAS conditions indicate that pin1(1-18) rapidly rotates around the average helical axis, and the helical rods are inclined at approximately 30 degrees to the lipid long axis. 13C chemical shift values for pin1(20-44) labeled at Gly25, Leu28, or Ala31 under static conditions indicate that pin1(20-44) may be isotropically tumbling. 1H MAS chemical shift measurements suggest that pin1 is located at the membrane-water interface approximately parallel to the bilayer surface. Solid-state NMR results correlated well with the observed biological activity of pin1 in red blood cells and bacteria.
Tityus kappa (Ts kappa), a novel toxin from the venom of the scorpion Tityus serrulatus, is a 35-residue polypeptide cross-linked by three disulphide bridges and acts on small-conductance calcium-activated potassium channels (SK channels). Ts K was chemically synthesized using the solid-phase method and characterized. The synthetic product, sTs kappa, was indistinguishable from the natural toxin when tested in vitro in competition assay with radiolabelled apamin for binding to rat brain synaptosomes (IC50 = 3 nM). The sTs kappa was further tested in vivo for lethal activity to mice following intracerebroventricular inoculation (LD50 = 70 ng per mouse). The half-cystine pairings were formerly established by enzyme-based cleavage of sTs kappa; they were between Cys7-Cys28, Cys13-CyS33 and Cys17-Cys35, which is a disulphide bridge pattern similar to that of other short scorpion toxins. According to previous studies on SK channel-acting toxins, the putative influence of certain basic residues of Ts kappa (i.e. Arg6, Arg9, Lys18, Lys19) in its pharmacological activity was investigated using synthetic point-mutated analogues of the toxin with an Ala substitution at these positions. Data from binding assay, together with conformational analysis of the synthetic analogues by 1H-NMR, suggest that Arg6, and to a lesser extent Arg9, are important residues for an high-affinity interaction of this toxin with SK channels; interestingly these residues are located outside the alpha-helical structure, whereas the pharmacologically important basic residues from other SK channel-specific toxins had been located inside the alpha-helix.
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