Literature DB >> 18381281

Naturally occurring disulfide-bound dimers of three-fingered toxins: a paradigm for biological activity diversification.

Alexey V Osipov1, Igor E Kasheverov, Yana V Makarova, Vladislav G Starkov, Olga V Vorontsova, Rustam Kh Ziganshin, Tatyana V Andreeva, Marina V Serebryakova, Audrey Benoit, Ronald C Hogg, Daniel Bertrand, Victor I Tsetlin, Yuri N Utkin.   

Abstract

Disulfide-bound dimers of three-fingered toxins have been discovered in the Naja kaouthia cobra venom; that is, the homodimer of alpha-cobratoxin (a long-chain alpha-neurotoxin) and heterodimers formed by alpha-cobratoxin with different cytotoxins. According to circular dichroism measurements, toxins in dimers retain in general their three-fingered folding. The functionally important disulfide 26-30 in polypeptide loop II of alpha-cobratoxin moiety remains intact in both types of dimers. Biological activity studies showed that cytotoxins within dimers completely lose their cytotoxicity. However, the dimers retain most of the alpha-cobratoxin capacity to compete with alpha-bungarotoxin for binding to Torpedo and alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) as well as to Lymnea stagnalis acetylcholine-binding protein. Electrophysiological experiments on neuronal nAChRs expressed in Xenopus oocytes have shown that alpha-cobratoxin dimer not only interacts with alpha7 nAChR but, in contrast to alpha-cobratoxin monomer, also blocks alpha3beta2 nAChR. In the latter activity it resembles kappa-bungarotoxin, a dimer with no disulfides between monomers. These results demonstrate that dimerization is essential for the interaction of three-fingered neurotoxins with heteromeric alpha3beta2 nAChRs.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18381281     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M802085200

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  28 in total

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