Literature DB >> 22677804

Recombinant expression of mutants of the Frankenstein disintegrin, RTS-ocellatusin. Evidence for the independent origin of RGD and KTS/RTS disintegrins.

Raquel Sanz-Soler1, Carolina Lorente, Beatriz Company, Libia Sanz, Paula Juárez, Alicia Pérez, Yun Zhang, Yang Jin, Runqiang Chen, Johannes A Eble, Juan J Calvete, Gema Bolás.   

Abstract

The requirements to transform a short disintegrin of the RGD clade into an RTS disintegrin, were investigated through the generation of recombinant mutants of ocellatusin in which the RGD tripeptide was substituted for RTS in different positions along the integrin-specificity loop. Any attempt to create an active integrin α(1)β(1) inhibitory motif within the specificity loop of ocellatusin was unsuccessful. Replacing the whole RGD-loop of ocellatusin by the RTS-loop of jerdostatin was neither sufficient for confering α(1)β(1) binding specificity to this ocellatusin-RTS Frankenstein(2) mutant. Factors other than the integrin-binding loop sequence per se are thus required to transform a disintegrin scaffold from the RGD clade into another scaffold from the RTS/KTS clade. Moreover, our results provide evidences, that the RTS/KTS short disintegrins have potentially been recruited into the venom gland of Eurasian vipers independently from the canonical neofunctionalization pathway of the RGD disintegrins. PCR-amplifications of jerdostatin-like sequences from a number of taxa across reptiles, including snakes (Crotalinae, Viperinae, and Elapidae taxa) and lizards (Lacertidae and Iguanidae) clearly showed that genes coding for RTS/KTS disintegrins existed long before the split of Lacertidae and Iguania, thus predating the recruitment of the SVMP precursors of disintegrins, providing strong support for the view of an independent evolutionary history of the RTS/KTS and the RGD clades of short disintegrins.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22677804     DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2012.05.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicon        ISSN: 0041-0101            Impact factor:   3.033


  3 in total

1.  Medically important differences in snake venom composition are dictated by distinct postgenomic mechanisms.

Authors:  Nicholas R Casewell; Simon C Wagstaff; Wolfgang Wüster; Darren A N Cook; Fiona M S Bolton; Sarah I King; Davinia Pla; Libia Sanz; Juan J Calvete; Robert A Harrison
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-06-09       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Structure-Function Relationship of the Disintegrin Family: Sequence Signature and Integrin Interaction.

Authors:  Ariana A Vasconcelos; Jorge C Estrada; Victor David; Luciana S Wermelinger; Fabio C L Almeida; Russolina B Zingali
Journal:  Front Mol Biosci       Date:  2021-12-03

Review 3.  Recombinant and Chimeric Disintegrins in Preclinical Research.

Authors:  Victor David; Barbara Barbosa Succar; João Alfredo de Moraes; Roberta Ferreira Gomes Saldanha-Gama; Christina Barja-Fidalgo; Russolina Benedeta Zingali
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2018-08-07       Impact factor: 4.546

  3 in total

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