1. Academic Validation
  2. Novel conotoxins from Conus striatus and Conus kinoshitai selectively block TTX-resistant sodium channels

Novel conotoxins from Conus striatus and Conus kinoshitai selectively block TTX-resistant sodium channels

  • Biochemistry. 2005 May 17;44(19):7259-65. doi: 10.1021/bi0473408.
Grzegorz Bulaj 1 Peter J West James E Garrett Maren Watkins Min-Min Zhang Raymond S Norton Brian J Smith Doju Yoshikami Baldomero M Olivera
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

The Peptides isolated from venoms of predatory marine Conus snails ("conotoxins") are well-known to be highly potent and selective pharmacological agents for voltage-gated ion channels and receptors. We report the discovery of two novel TTX-resistant Sodium Channel blockers, mu-conotoxins SIIIA and KIIIA, from two species of cone snails. The two toxins were identified and characterized by combining molecular techniques and chemical synthesis. Both Peptides inhibit TTX-resistant sodium currents in neurons of frog sympathetic and dorsal root ganglia but poorly block action potentials in frog skeletal muscle, which are mediated by TTX-sensitive sodium channels. The amino acid sequences in the C-terminal region of the two Peptides and of the previously characterized mu-conotoxin SmIIIA (which also blocks TTX-resistant channels) are similar, but the three Peptides differ in the length of their first N-terminal loop. We used molecular dynamics simulations to analyze how altering the number of residues in the first loop affects the overall structure of mu-conotoxins. Our results suggest that the naturally occurring truncations do not affect the conformation of the C-terminal loops. Taken together, structural and functional differences among mu-conotoxins SmIIIA, SIIIA, and KIIIA offer a unique insight into the "evolutionary engineering" of conotoxin activity.

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