| Literature DB >> 31133708 |
Valentin M Tabakmakher1,2, Nikolay A Krylov1,3, Alexey I Kuzmenkov1, Roman G Efremov1,3,4, Alexander A Vassilevski5,6.
Abstract
Potassium channels are the most diverse group of ion channels in humans. They take vital parts in numerous physiological processes and their malfunction gives rise to a range of pathologies. In addition to small molecules, there is a wide selection of several hundred polypeptide ligands binding to potassium channels, the majority of which have been isolated from animal venoms. Until recently, only scorpion toxins received focused attention being systematically assembled in the manually curated Kalium database, but there is a diversity of well-characterized potassium channel ligands originating from other sources. To address this issue, here we present the updated and improved Kalium 2.0 that covers virtually all known polypeptide ligands of potassium channels and reviews all available pharmacological data. In addition to an expansion, we have introduced several new features to the database including posttranslational modification annotation, indication of ligand mode of action, BLAST search, and possibility of data export.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31133708 PMCID: PMC6536513 DOI: 10.1038/s41597-019-0074-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Kalium entries statistics.
| Source organisms | Entries added | Current number of entries | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kalium 1.0 | Kalium 2.0 | |||
| Scorpions | 174 | 19 | 193 | |
| Snakes | — | 29 | 29 | |
| Spiders | — | 50 | 50 | |
| Sea anemones | — | 35 | 35 | |
| Cone snails | — | 19 | 19 | |
| Miscellaneous | Nematodes | — | 2 | 2 |
| Hymenopterans | — | 4 | 4 | |
| Lizards | — | 1 | 1 | |
| Human | — | 1 | 1 | |
| Fungi | — | 1 | 1 | |
| Centipedes | — | 5 | 5 | |
| Total | 174 | 164 | 340 | |
Comparison of ligand molecular masses measured experimentally and calculated in Kalium.
| UniProt ID | Experimental mass, Da | Kalium calculated mass, Da | Known modifications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q9U3Z3 | 3569 | 3571.74 | Signal and propeptide cleavage, 4 disulfide bridges, 4 γ-carboxyglutamates, 1 γ-hydroxyproline, C-terminal amidation |
| P0CG45 | 2805.84 | 2807.25 | 3 disulfide bridges, 7 γ-hydroxyprolines |
| Q86QT3 | 4730.8 | 4730.49 | Signal peptide cleavage, 4 disulfide bridges |
| P84704 | 2872.5 | 2873.32 | 2 disulfide bridges |
| P0C166 | 4082.8 | 4081.99 | N-Terminal cyclization of glutamine, C-terminal amidation, 4 disulfide bridges |
Fig. 1Data sources and curation. Schematic representation of the data stream and curation process in Kalium 2.0.
Fig. 2The main window of Kalium 2.0. Top panel consists of the database logo (implementing the home button function), and links to “Home”, “About”, “Help”, “FAQ”, and “Contacts” pages. The second panel contains the organism selection buttons, an indicator of shown and selected entries number, the “Clustal”, “BLAST”, and “Export as” buttons, and a search bar. The main body of the database is presented by a table consisting of fields described in “Data Records”. The figure displays results for the following query: show entries, in which source organisms are snakes, spiders, or sea anemones.
Description of Kalium 2.0 main window general table.
| Table field | Definition |
|---|---|
| Organism | The Latin name of the source organism. |
| Name | The nomenclature name or conventionally used name of polypeptide. |
| Synonyms | Trivial name(s) of polypeptide. |
| UniProt ID | Unique UniProt ID of polypeptide. |
| Sequence | Amino acid sequences of mature polypeptides presented in the one-letter code. “–NH2” indicates amidation of the C-terminal amino acid; “Z” is for the N-terminal pyroglutamic acid; “O” for 4-hydroxyproline; “ |
| PDB | Available PDB ID(s) of polypeptide. |
| Mass | Molecular mass of mature polypeptide calculated taking into account the post-translational modifications. Molecular masses for O-glycosylated polypeptides are marked with the “+” symbol. |
| Publication date | The date when the polypeptide sequence was first published. |
| Activity | The list of all targets on which the polypeptide was ever tested. |
Fig. 3Ligand card overview. Kappa-theraphotoxin-Sc1a is taken as an example. All information present in the general table is duplicated here with certain additions (as described in “Ligand card”). Activity data are summarized in a table located to the bottom of the card.
Description of Ligand card records.
| Record | Definition |
|---|---|
| Permanent link | Unique link for the Ligand card which can be used for citation purposes. |
| Raw sequence | Polypeptide precursor sequence (if available). |
| Last modified | The date of the latest modification to the entry. |
| Mode | The mode of ligand action on K+ channels: |
| Target channel | K+ channels that were used for toxin activity measurements named according to IUPHAR, except the following: |
| Data type | The type of data reported: dissociation constant ( |
| Method type | The experimental method applied: |
| Test system | The cell type used for channel expression: |
| Species | The origin organism of the ion channel that was used for measurements. The most common channels belong to |
| Value, nM | Numeric value of polypeptide activity (Kd, Ki, IC50 or EC50) presented in nM. These data are collected manually from literature. Values are shown in the following formats: |
| Ref. (PubMed/DOI) | PubMed ID or DOI of the reference article. |
Those records that duplicate information of the main window general table are described in Table 3.
| Design Type(s) | database creation objective • data integration objective |
| Measurement Type(s) | ligand |
| Technology Type(s) | digital curation |
| Factor Type(s) | Species |
| Sample Characteristic(s) | Serpentes • Scorpiones • Araneae • Anemone • Conus <genus> • Ancylostoma ceylanicum • Anoplius samariensis • Apis mellifera • Brugia malayi • Heloderma horridum horridum • Homo sapiens • Pseudoplectania nigrella • Scolopendra mutilans • Scolopendra subspinipes dehaani |