Heparin and heparan sulfate have recently been shown to bind to snake cardiotoxin (CTX) and to potentiate its penetration into phospholipid monolayer under physiological ionic conditions. Herein we analyze the heparinbinding domain of CTX using 10 CTXs from Taiwan and African cobra venom. We also performed computer modeling to obtain more information of the binding at molecular level. The results provide a molecular model for interaction of CTX-heparin complex where the cationic belt of the conserved residues on the concave surface of three finger -sheet polypeptides initiates ionic interaction with heparin-like molecules followed by specific binding of Lys residues near the tip of loop 2 of CTX. The dissociation constants of CTXs differ by as much as 4 orders of magnitude, ranging from ϳ140 M for toxin ␥ to ϳ20 nM for CTX M3, depending on the presence of Lys residues near the tip of loop 2. High affinity heparin binding becomes possible due to the presence of Arg-28, Lys-33, or the socalled consensus heparin binding sequence of XKKXXXKRX near the tip of the loop. The well defined three-finger loop structure of CTX provides an interesting template for the design of high affinity heparin-binding polypeptides with -sheet structure. The finding that several cobra CTXs and phospholipase A2 bind to heparin with different affinity may provide information on the synergistic action of the two venom proteins.
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