| Literature DB >> 30154370 |
Volker Herzig1, Aline Dantas de Araujo2, Kathryn P Greenwood3, Yanni K-Y Chin4, Monique J Windley5, Youmie Chong6, Markus Muttenthaler7,8, Mehdi Mobli9,10, Neil Audsley11, Graham M Nicholson12, Paul F Alewood13, Glenn F King14.
Abstract
Spider venoms are a rich source of insecticidal peptide toxins. Their development as bioinsecticides has, however, been hampered due to concerns about potential lack of stability and oral bioactivity. We therefore systematically evaluated several synthetic strategies to increase the stability and oral potency of the potent insecticidal spider-venom peptide ω-HXTX-Hv1a (Hv1a). Selective chemical replacement of disulfide bridges with diselenide bonds and N- to C-terminal cyclization were anticipated to improve Hv1a resistance to proteolytic digestion, and thereby its activity when delivered orally. We found that native Hv1a is orally active in blowflies, but 91-fold less potent than when administered by injection. Introduction of a single diselenide bond had no effect on the susceptibility to scrambling or the oral activity of Hv1a. N- to C-terminal cyclization of the peptide backbone did not significantly improve the potency of Hv1a when injected into blowflies and it led to a significant decrease in oral activity. We show that this is likely due to a dramatically reduced rate of translocation of cyclic Hv1a across the insect midgut, highlighting the importance of testing bioavailability in addition to toxin stability.Entities:
Keywords: cyclization; diselenide bond; insecticidal; oral bioavailability; selenocysteine; spider venom peptide; ω-HXTX-Hv1a
Year: 2018 PMID: 30154370 PMCID: PMC6164231 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines6030090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Sequence and structure of Hv1a and analogs with the colors indicating individual disulfide bonds (C1-C4 = yellow; C2-C5 = red and C3-C6 = green) (A) Top panel: Three-dimensional structure of native Hv1a (PDB 1AXH; [7]). Bottom panel: Schematic of the inhibitor cystine knot (ICK) motif of Hv1a, which comprises an antiparallel β-sheet (shown in grey) stabilized by a cystine knot. The six cysteine residues that form the cystine knot are labelled 1–6; (B) Schematic of the ICK motif for the three diselenide analogs of Hv1a. The blue color indicates replacement of a disulfide bond with a diselenide bond; (C) Schematic of the ICK motif for the cyclic Hv1a analog. The eight residues that form the linker bridging the N- and C-termini are labelled; (D) Amino acid sequences of native Hv1a and the various analogs used in this study.
Figure 2Oxidative folding of native and diselenide analogs of Hv1a. (A–D): RP-high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) chromatograms showing the native and each of the diselenide analogs of Hv1a after oxidative folding. The folding conditions were: 0.2 M MOPS buffer, pH 7.3, 0.4 M KCl, 2 mM EDTA, 10 mM GSH/2 mM GSSG, 24 h, room temperature. Asterisks denote the peak corresponding to the correctly folded diselenide toxin.
Accumulation of correctly folded toxin during folding and susceptibility of the native and diselenide Hv1a to scrambling.
| Peptide | Folding Efficiency | Correctly Folded Toxin | |
|---|---|---|---|
| With 1 Equivalent GSH, pH 7.2 | In Buffer, pH 7.2 | ||
| native Hv1a | 48% | 85% | 100% |
| 1,4-SeSe-Hv1a | 55% | 85% | 100% |
| 2,5-SeSe-Hv1a | 38% | 82% | 100% |
| 3,6-SeSe-Hv1a | 27% | 60% | 95% |
Figure 3Comparison of the HN (top) and Hα chemical shifts (bottom) of cyclic and native Hv1a.
LD50 values for injection of Hv1a and analogs into sheep blowflies.
| Toxin | ω-Hv1a | 1,4-SeSe-ω-Hv1a | 2,5-SeSe-ω-Hv1a | 3,6-SeSe-ω-Hv1a | Cyclic-ω-Hv1a |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LD50 (pmol/g) | 499 ± 53 | 407 ± 22 | 455 ± 35 | 446 ± 12 | 293 ± 18 |
Figure 4Oral toxicity assays. Lethality was determined 24 h after oral ingestion of toxin by sheep blowflies. All of the analogs have decreased oral activity compared to native Hv1a.
Figure 5Effect of Hv1a and analogs on CaV channels in cockroach dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neurons. (A,B) Typical effects of (A) 1,4-SeSe-Hv1a and (B) cyclic Hv1a on IBa. Representative control (black) and toxin (cyan and shaded for 1,4-Se-Se-Hv1a, grey and shaded for cyclic Hv1a) traces elicited by a 100-ms depolarising test pulse (Vtest) to −40 mV (left-hand ‘a’ panels; M-LVA CaV channel currents) or +20 mV (right-hand ‘b’ panels; HVA CaV channel currents). The dotted line represents zero current. Voltage protocols are shown above traces; (C) Comparison of average block of M-LVA and HVA IBa by native Hv1a (black), 1,4-SeSe-Hv1a (cyan), and cyclic Hv1a (gray). Data are mean ± SEM (n = 4–5). There were no significant differences between native Hv1a and either analog (two-way ANOVA, p > 0.05, n = 3–5); (D,E) Effect of (D) 1,4-SeSe-Hv1a and (E) cyclic Hv1a (E) on the voltage-dependence of CaV channel activation. CaV channel currents were elicited by the pulse protocol shown above panel (E); Currents recorded in the presence of toxin were normalised to the maximum inward IBa in controls and fitted with Equation (1) (see Section 4.5). Data shows normalised IBa before (closed circles) and after (open circles and shaded) application of toxin. Data are mean ± SEM (n = 4–5).
In vitro lumen to hemolymph flux of Hv1a and analogs across the midgut of Manduca sexta larvae when present at different concentrations in the luminal fluid. Data are mean ± S.E.M, n = 9–19.
| Concentration of Hv1a or Analog (µM) | Lumen to Hemolymph Flux (pmol/cm2/h) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hv1a | Cyclic Hv1a | 1,4-SeSe-Hv1a | |
| 0.1 | 11.8 ± 2.7 | 0.14 ± 0.03 | — |
| 1.0 | 41 ± 11 | 1.7 ± 0.6 | — |
| 10 | 351 ± 32 | 94 ± 16 | — |
| 10 | 287 ± 23 | — | 227 ± 14 |