Literature DB >> 19380747

Rapid sensitive analysis of cysteine rich peptide venom components.

Beatrix M Ueberheide1, David Fenyö, Paul F Alewood, Brian T Chait.   

Abstract

Disulfide-rich peptide venoms from animals such as snakes, spiders, scorpions, and certain marine snails represent one of nature's great diversity libraries of bioactive molecules. The various species of marine cone shells have alone been estimated to produce >50,000 distinct peptide venoms. These peptides have stimulated considerable interest because of their ability to potently alter the function of specific ion channels. To date, only a small fraction of this immense resource has been characterized because of the difficulty in elucidating their primary structures, which range in size between 10 and 80 aa, include up to 5 disulfide bonds, and can contain extensive posttranslational modifications. The extraordinary complexity of crude venoms and the lack of DNA databases for many of the organisms of interest present major analytical challenges. Here, we describe a strategy that uses mass spectrometry for the elucidation of the mature peptide toxin components of crude venom samples. Key to this strategy is our use of electron transfer dissociation (ETD), a mass spectrometric fragmentation technique that can produce sequence information across the entire peptide backbone. However, because ETD only yields comprehensive sequence coverage when the charge state of the precursor peptide ion is sufficiently high and the m/z ratio is low, we combined ETD with a targeted chemical derivatization strategy to increase the charge state of cysteine-containing peptide toxins. Using this strategy, we obtained full sequences for 31 peptide toxins, using just 7% of the crude venom from the venom gland of a single cone snail (Conus textile).

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19380747      PMCID: PMC2678425          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0900745106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  50 in total

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Review 3.  Diversity of the neurotoxic Conus peptides: a model for concerted pharmacological discovery.

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4.  Probing peptide libraries from Conus achatinus using mass spectrometry and cDNA sequencing: identification of delta and omega-conotoxins.

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6.  The 1.1 A crystal structure of the neuronal acetylcholine receptor antagonist, alpha-conotoxin PnIA from Conus pennaceus.

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7.  Hydrogen rearrangement to and from radical z fragments in electron capture dissociation of peptides.

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9.  New method for characterizing highly disulfide-bridged peptides in complex mixtures: application to toxin identification from crude venoms.

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  37 in total

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4.  Proteomic analysis provides insights on venom processing in Conus textile.

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5.  Various conotoxin diversifications revealed by a venomic study of Conus flavidus.

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6.  Optimized deep-targeted proteotranscriptomic profiling reveals unexplored Conus toxin diversity and novel cysteine frameworks.

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7.  Large-scale identification of endogenous secretory peptides using electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry.

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Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2012-12-18       Impact factor: 5.911

8.  The Terebridae and teretoxins: Combining phylogeny and anatomy for concerted discovery of bioactive compounds.

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10.  Manipulating neuronal circuits with endogenous and recombinant cell-surface tethered modulators.

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