Literature DB >> 8408054

Complete primary structure and biochemical properties of gilatoxin, a serine protease with kallikrein-like and angiotensin-degrading activities.

P Utaisincharoen1, S P Mackessy, R A Miller, A T Tu.   

Abstract

The activity and the complete primary structure of gilatoxin, a glycoprotein component from the venom of the Mexican beaded lizard (Heloderma horridum horridum) has been elucidated. Gilatoxin, a serine protease, showed kallikrein-like activity, releasing bradykinin from kininogen; toxin-treated kininogen also produced lowered blood pressure in rats and contraction of isolated rat uterus smooth muscle. Gilatoxin catalyzed the hydrolysis of various arginine ester substrates for trypsin and thrombin and degraded both angiotensin I and II by cleavage of the dipeptide Asp-Arg from the NH2-terminal end. Fibrinogen was degraded but a fibrin clot was not produced, indicating that gilatoxin has specificities different from thrombin and snake venom thrombin-like proteases. The complete amino acid sequence of gilatoxin (245 residues) was deduced from NH2-terminal sequencing of overlapping peptide fragments cleaved from the reduced and alkylated toxin by enzymatic and chemical methods. The toxin is extensively glycosylated, containing approximately 8 mol of monosaccharide/mol of toxin, but appears to lack O-glycosylation sites. Amino acid sequence alignment of gilatoxin with batroxobin, crotalase, kallikrein, thrombin, trypsin, and several partial sequences of other Heloderma toxins reveals that there is considerable homology between these enzymes, particularly in the regions of the presumed catalytic site. Gilatoxin contains an additional 7 residues in the highly conserved catalytic region of serine proteases (including Asp-96, in the basic specificity pocket of thrombin) which may contribute to the unusual substrate specificity of the toxin.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8408054

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  9 in total

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Authors:  Bryan G Fry; Kelly Winter; Janette A Norman; Kim Roelants; Rob J A Nabuurs; Matthias J P van Osch; Wouter M Teeuwisse; Louise van der Weerd; Judith E McNaughtan; Hang Fai Kwok; Holger Scheib; Laura Greisman; Elazar Kochva; Laurence J Miller; Fan Gao; John Karas; Denis Scanlon; Feng Lin; Sanjaya Kuruppu; Chris Shaw; Lily Wong; Wayne C Hodgson
Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2010-07-14       Impact factor: 5.911

2.  From genome to "venome": molecular origin and evolution of the snake venom proteome inferred from phylogenetic analysis of toxin sequences and related body proteins.

Authors:  Bryan G Fry
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2005-03       Impact factor: 9.043

3.  Structural and molecular diversification of the Anguimorpha lizard mandibular venom gland system in the arboreal species Abronia graminea.

Authors:  Ivan Koludarov; Kartik Sunagar; Eivind A B Undheim; Timothy N W Jackson; Tim Ruder; Darryl Whitehead; Alejandro C Saucedo; G Roberto Mora; Alejandro C Alagon; Glenn King; Agostinho Antunes; Bryan G Fry
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  2012-11-17       Impact factor: 2.395

4.  Novel venom gene discovery in the platypus.

Authors:  Camilla M Whittington; Anthony T Papenfuss; Devin P Locke; Elaine R Mardis; Richard K Wilson; Sahar Abubucker; Makedonka Mitreva; Emily S W Wong; Arthur L Hsu; Philip W Kuchel; Katherine Belov; Wesley C Warren
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2010-09-29       Impact factor: 13.583

5.  Blarina toxin, a mammalian lethal venom from the short-tailed shrew Blarina brevicauda: Isolation and characterization.

Authors:  Masaki Kita; Yasuo Nakamura; Yuushi Okumura; Satoshi D Ohdachi; Yuichi Oba; Michiyasu Yoshikuni; Hiroshi Kido; Daisuke Uemura
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2004-05-10       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Tracking the recruitment and evolution of snake toxins using the evolutionary context provided by the Bothrops jararaca genome.

Authors:  Diego Dantas Almeida; Vincent Louis Viala; Pedro Gabriel Nachtigall; Michael Broe; H Lisle Gibbs; Solange Maria de Toledo Serrano; Ana Maria Moura-da-Silva; Paulo Lee Ho; Milton Yutaka Nishiyama-Jr; Inácio L M Junqueira-de-Azevedo
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-05-18       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Enter the Dragon: The Dynamic and Multifunctional Evolution of Anguimorpha Lizard Venoms.

Authors:  Ivan Koludarov; Timothy Nw Jackson; Bianca Op den Brouw; James Dobson; Daniel Dashevsky; Kevin Arbuckle; Christofer J Clemente; Edward J Stockdale; Chip Cochran; Jordan Debono; Carson Stephens; Nadya Panagides; Bin Li; Mary-Louise Roy Manchadi; Aude Violette; Rudy Fourmy; Iwan Hendrikx; Amanda Nouwens; Judith Clements; Paolo Martelli; Hang Fai Kwok; Bryan G Fry
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2017-08-06       Impact factor: 4.546

8.  Varanid Lizard Venoms Disrupt the Clotting Ability of Human Fibrinogen through Destructive Cleavage.

Authors:  James S Dobson; Christina N Zdenek; Chris Hay; Aude Violette; Rudy Fourmy; Chip Cochran; Bryan G Fry
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2019-05-07       Impact factor: 4.546

9.  The Dragon's Paralysing Spell: Evidence of Sodium and Calcium Ion Channel Binding Neurotoxins in Helodermatid and Varanid Lizard Venoms.

Authors:  James S Dobson; Richard J Harris; Christina N Zdenek; Tam Huynh; Wayne C Hodgson; Frank Bosmans; Rudy Fourmy; Aude Violette; Bryan G Fry
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2021-08-06       Impact factor: 4.546

  9 in total

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