| Literature DB >> 32092883 |
Kathleen Yin1,2, Jennifer R Deuis2, Zoltan Dekan2, Ai-Hua Jin2, Paul F Alewood2, Glenn F King2, Volker Herzig2,3, Irina Vetter2,4.
Abstract
Spider venom is a novel source of disulfide-rich peptides with potent and selective activity at voltage-gated sodium channels (NaV). Here, we describe the discovery of μ-theraphotoxin-Pme1a and μ/δ-theraphotoxin-Pme2a, two novel peptides from the venom of the Gooty Ornamental tarantula Poecilotheria metallica that modulate NaV channels. Pme1a is a 35 residue peptide that inhibits NaV1.7 peak current (IC50 334 ± 114 nM) and shifts the voltage dependence of activation to more depolarised membrane potentials (V1/2 activation: Δ = +11.6 mV). Pme2a is a 33 residue peptide that delays fast inactivation and inhibits NaV1.7 peak current (EC50 > 10 μM). Synthesis of a [+22K]Pme2a analogue increased potency at NaV1.7 (IC50 5.6 ± 1.1 μM) and removed the effect of the native peptide on fast inactivation, indicating that a lysine at position 22 (Pme2a numbering) is important for inhibitory activity. Results from this study may be used to guide the rational design of spider venom-derived peptides with improved potency and selectivity at NaV channels in the future.Entities:
Keywords: NaV1.7; NaV1.8; peptide; sodium channel; spider; venom
Year: 2020 PMID: 32092883 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines8020037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059