| Literature DB >> 27571103 |
Viviane A Bastos1,2, Francisco Gomes-Neto3,4, Jonas Perales5,6, Ana Gisele C Neves-Ferreira7,8, Richard H Valente9,10.
Abstract
The research on natural snake venom metalloendopeptidase inhibitors (SVMPIs) began in the 18th century with the pioneering work of Fontana on the resistance that vipers exhibited to their own venom. During the past 40 years, SVMPIs have been isolated mainly from the sera of resistant animals, and characterized to different extents. They are acidic oligomeric glycoproteins that remain biologically active over a wide range of pH and temperature values. Based on primary structure determination, mammalian plasmatic SVMPIs are classified as members of the immunoglobulin (Ig) supergene protein family, while the one isolated from muscle belongs to the ficolin/opsonin P35 family. On the other hand, SVMPIs from snake plasma have been placed in the cystatin superfamily. These natural antitoxins constitute the first line of defense against snake venoms, inhibiting the catalytic activities of snake venom metalloendopeptidases through the establishment of high-affinity, non-covalent interactions. This review presents a historical account of the field of natural resistance, summarizing its main discoveries and current challenges, which are mostly related to the limitations that preclude three-dimensional structural determinations of these inhibitors using "gold-standard" methods; perspectives on how to circumvent such limitations are presented. Potential applications of these SVMPIs in medicine are also highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: cross-linking; hydrogen/deuterium exchange; mass spectrometry; metalloendopeptidase inhibitor; modeling; natural immunity; natural resistance; snake venom; structure; therapeutic application
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27571103 PMCID: PMC5037476 DOI: 10.3390/toxins8090250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1Research milestones on natural inhibitors of metalloendopeptidases. The investigation on the natural resistance that some animals presented to snake venoms began in the eighteenth century. Since Fontana’s pioneering work, the field has grown considerably. Researchers have managed to purify several inhibitors from the sera of snakes and mammals and determined their relevant physicochemical properties. The challenges that lie ahead are the three-dimensional structure elucidation of these snake venom metalloendopeptidase inhibitors (SVMPIs) in their free and toxin-complexed forms in order to better understand the molecular dynamics of this interaction.
Figure 2Strategies for a structural view of SVMPIs. (Left) The experimental methods for structure determination, NMR spectroscopy and XRD crystallography, are the “gold-standard” techniques in protein structure elucidation, providing atomic resolution of individual proteins and their complexes. The SVMPIs DM43 and BJ46a represent a challenge for these techniques. For NMR spectroscopy, due to the molecular size of both molecules, costly and time-consuming methods for sample labeling and analysis are required. For XRD crystallography, crystals of DM43 produced low-resolution diffraction pattern while BJ46a could not be crystallized, highlighting the limiting character of the crystallization step. Hence, modeling becomes an important tool for the structural studies of these molecules. (Right) In molecular modeling, the main step is the identification of a homologous protein, whose experimental structure has already been determined, to be used as a template structure. The identification in structure databases of sequences evolutionarily correlated with sequential identity greater than 40% is done by standard pairwise sequence search methods, allowing the generation of high accuracy models. However, below this sequence identity threshold the correlation between two structures is difficult to address. In this range, sequences are correlated directly with proteins of known structure (fold recognition). A drawback is that, due to the low evolutionary correlation and the low sensitivity in the sequence alignment building, the accuracy of the produced models is lower. On the other hand, the ensemble of models produced can be filtered according to their agreement with experimental data. In our proposed strategy, these data would come from XL-MS, HDX-MS and SAXS assays, leading to the selection of accurate models, and shedding some light on the three-dimensional structural characteristics of these SVMPIs. Consequently, the molecular basis of the interaction between the inhibitors and their target toxins could be established.
Template search for the SVMPIs DM43, HSF, and BJ46a. All structures identified as possible templates are below the threshold of 40% of sequence identity.
| Feature | Ig Supergene Family | Cystatin Superfamily | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DM43 (291) | HSF (323) | BJ46a (322) | ||
| Template (PDB ID) | 1NKR | 5EIQ | 2KZX | 2WBK |
| Release date | 11 November 1998 | 25 November 2015 | 15 February 2012 | 4 April 2014 |
| Number of aligned residues | 193 | 192 | 98 | 55 |
| 4 × 10−5 | 7 × 10−18 | 1 × 10−1 | 5 × 10−1 | |
| Identity | (50/193) 26% | (71/192) 37% | (26/98) 27% | (15/55) 33% |
| Positives | (78/193) 40% | (91/192) 47% | (42/98) 42% | (29/55) 52% |
| Gaps | (15/193) 7% | (14/192) 7% | (5/98) 5% | (1/55) 1% |
| Aligned region | 9–196 | 1–188 | 14–110 | 207–261 |
The complete primary structures of DM43, HSF, and BJ46a are composed of 291, 323, and 322 amino acids, respectively (numbers in parentheses). PSI-Blast search with default parameters (Expect threshold 10, Word size 3, Matrix BLOSUM62, Gap Costs Existence 11, Extension 1, PSI-BLAST threshold 0.005) were done against the PDB database. Template is the best hit, identified by its PDB ID number. Release date is the structure’s publication date in the database. E-value is the expected number of chances that the match is random. Three percentages are calculated relatively to the number of aligned residues: identity (exact match residues), positives (exact + homology match residues), and gaps (inserted spaces to allow the alignment). 1NKR: inhibitory receptor (p58-cl42) for human natural killer cells. 5EIQ: human OSCAR ligand-binding domain. 2KZX: A3DHT5 from Clostridium thermocellum, Northeast Structural Genomics Consortium Target CmR116. 2WBK: beta-mannosidase, Man2A.
New HSF-correlated structures in the PDB database, using DELTA-Blast.
| Feature | HSF (323) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Template (PDB ID) | 4LZI | 3PS8 | 1R4C | 1G96 |
| Release date | 26 February 2014 | 21 December 2011 | 21 September 2004 | 6 April 2001 |
| Number of aligned residues | 222 | 115 | 107 | 115 |
| 4 × 10−55 | 6 × 10−35 | 8 × 10−36 | 2 × 10−34 | |
| Identity | (31/222) 14% | (15/115) 13% | (17/107) 16% | (15/115) 13% |
| Positives | (67/222) 30% | (39/115) 33% | (32/107) 29% | (39/115) 33% |
| Gaps | (55/222) 24% | (8/115) 6% | (4/107) 3% | (8/115) 6% |
DELTA-Blast search followed by PSI-Blast, with the default parameters described in Table 1. Template is the best hit, identified by its PDB ID number. Release date is the structure’s publication date in the database. E-value is the expected number of chances that the match is random. Three percentages are calculated relatively to the number of aligned residues: identity (exact match residues), positives (exact + homology match residues), and gaps (inserted spaces to allow the alignment). Despite the intermediate sequential identity value, the structure 4LZI shows the best sequence coverage (number of aligned residues) and positive matches, being the best template since structure 1G96. 4LZI: Solanum tuberosum multicystatin. 3PS8: L68V mutant of human cystatin C. 1R4C: N-truncated human cystatin C, dimeric form. 1G96: human cystatin C, dimeric form.
BJ46a-correlated structures in PDB database, using DELTA-Blast.
| Feature | BJ46a (322) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Template (PDB ID) | 4LZI | 3PS8 | 1G96 |
| Release date | 26 February 2014 | 21 December 2011 | 6 April 2001 |
| Number of aligned residues | 226 | 115 | 115 |
| 3 × 10−33 | 3 × 10−27 | 6 × 10−27 | |
| Identity | (30/226) 13% | (14/115) 12% | (14/115) 12% |
| Positives | (65/226) 28% | (41/115) 35% | (41/115) 35% |
| Gaps | (55/226) 25% | (8/115) 6% | (8/115) 6% |
DELTA-Blast search followed by PSI-Blast, with default parameters described in Table 1. Template |is the best hit, identified by its PDB ID number. Release date is the structure’s publication date |in the database. E-value is the expected number of chances that the match is random. Three percentages are calculated relatively to the number of aligned residues: identity (exact match residues), positives (exact + homology match residues), and gaps (inserted spaces to allow the alignment). Despite the intermediate sequential identity value, the structure 4LZI shows the best sequence coverage (number of aligned residues) and positive matches, being the best template since structure 1G96. 4LZI: Solanum tuberosum multicystatin. 3PS8: L68V mutant of human cystatin C. 1G96: human cystatin C dimeric form.