| Literature DB >> 27104567 |
Aida Verdes1,2,3, Prachi Anand4, Juliette Gorson5,6,7, Stephen Jannetti8,9, Patrick Kelly10,11, Abba Leffler12,13, Danny Simpson14,15, Girish Ramrattan16, Mandë Holford17,18,19.
Abstract
Animal venoms comprise a diversity of peptide toxins that manipulate molecular targets such as ion channels and receptors, making venom peptides attractive candidates for the development of therapeutics to benefit human health. However, identifying bioactive venom peptides remains a significant challenge. In this review we describe our particular venomics strategy for the discovery, characterization, and optimization of Terebridae venom peptides, teretoxins. Our strategy reflects the scientific path from mollusks to medicine in an integrative sequential approach with the following steps: (1) delimitation of venomous Terebridae lineages through taxonomic and phylogenetic analyses; (2) identification and classification of putative teretoxins through omics methodologies, including genomics, transcriptomics, and proteomics; (3) chemical and recombinant synthesis of promising peptide toxins; (4) structural characterization through experimental and computational methods; (5) determination of teretoxin bioactivity and molecular function through biological assays and computational modeling; (6) optimization of peptide toxin affinity and selectivity to molecular target; and (7) development of strategies for effective delivery of venom peptide therapeutics. While our research focuses on terebrids, the venomics approach outlined here can be applied to the discovery and characterization of peptide toxins from any venomous taxa.Entities:
Keywords: Terebridae; animal venom; drug delivery; drug development; drug discovery; peptide therapeutics; peptide toxins; teretoxins; venom peptides; venomics
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27104567 PMCID: PMC4848642 DOI: 10.3390/toxins8040117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1From mollusks to medicine. Overview of venomics approach for discovery, characterization, and development of therapeutics from Terebridae venom peptides. This strategy begins with a phylogenetic delimitation of venomous terebrid lineages to identify the species that are producing venom to subdue their prey (shown in red); in yellow, identification of teretoxins through omics (genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics); in green, synthesis and structural characterization of teretoxins; in blue, bioactivity assays and identification of molecular targets; and in pink, peptide optimization and development of delivery methods for potential terebrid therapeutics.
Figure 2Terebridae phylogeny. Cladogram reconstructing the evolutionary relationships within the Terebridae family. Line color indicates presence or absence of venom apparatus. Solid red lines indicate clades in which all members have venom apparatus, dashed red lines indicate clades in which only some members have venom apparatus, and black lines indicate clades that lack venom apparatus. Cladogram based on phylogenetic reconstruction from [48].
Figure 3Bioinformatics pipeline for terebrid transcriptome analyses. Summary of bioinformatics pipeline for the identification of putative teretoxins from RNA-Seq data. Colors indicate different stages of the process. Orange indicates RNA extraction and sequencing, yellow indicates raw read quality filtering, red indicates transcriptome assembly, green indicates ORF and signal sequence prediction from transcripts, and purple indicates transcript annotation.
Figure 4Teretoxin gene superfamilies. Phylogenetic reconstruction of teretoxin gene superfamilies adapted from [10]. Clades representing teretoxin superfamilies are indicated in blue. The cysteine framework that characterizes each superfamily is denoted in purple and the corresponding cysteine scaffold in green. Terebrid superfamily TM is the only one with known homology to a conotoxin superfamily.
Figure 5Chemical synthesis of teretoxin Tv1. (a) Automated cycle of solid-phase peptide synthesis using FMOC chemistry; (b) RP-HPLC chromatogram of Tv1 synthesis (linear) and folding reaction. The folded conformation is indicated by the pink diamond and the linear conformation by the yellow diamond. (c) NMR structure of chemically synthesized Tv1. Disulfide bonds are depicted in yellow.
Figure 6Predicting 3D structure of venom peptides. Scatter plot representation of Rosetta scores for each of the 10,000 attempts to fold α-GID conotoxin from its amino acid sequence. Blue circles represent each folding attempt and the red circle represents a folding simulation that resulted in the correct structure. Inset: comparison of α-GID NMR structure (green) and Rosetta structure prediction (red). Rosetta ab initio folding protocol was used to predict structure and scores were calculated as the Root-Mean-Square Deviation (RMSD) to the NMR structure of α-GID.
Figure 7Structure-guided design of venom peptides. (A) Structure of acetylcholine binding protein (AchBP) in complex with conotoxin α-PnIA. AchBP subunits (green and purple) have a pentameric arrangement around a central pore. Conotoxin α-PnIA (red) binds at the interface of consecutive subunits. (B) Atomic interactions between α-PnIA at the interface of AchBP subunits. Hydrophobic interactions (green) are highly prevalent, but positive and negative interactions are also present. The AchBP binding pocket is extensively exposed to solvent (gray clouds) complicating the computational modeling.
Figure 8Trojan Horse teretoxin delivery strategy. Schematic overview of peptide drug delivery via virus-like particle (VLP) nanocontainers. The peptide cargo is first encapsulated in the VLP using recombinant biology. The VLP exterior is modified with the cell-penetrating peptide HIV-Tat and norbornene to enable transport to target site and disassembly respectively. The modified VLP nanocontainer is transported to the target site, disassembly is triggered by Grubbs II catalyst and the peptide cargo is released. The modular strategy outlined allows for substitution of alternate conjugates, cargo proteins, and disassembly mechanisms.