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1.
From the venom of a population of the sea snake Laticauda colubrina from the Solomon Islands, a neurotoxic component, Laticauda colubrina a (toxin Lc a), was isolated in 16.6% (A280) yield. Similarly, from the venom of a population of L. colubrina from the Philippines, a neurotoxic component, Laticauda colubrina b (toxin Lc b), was obtained in 10.0% (A280) yield. The LD50 values of these toxins were 0.12 microgram/g body wt. on intramuscular injection in mice. Toxins Lc a and Lc b were each composed of molecules containing 69 amino acid residues with eight half-cystine residues. The complete amino acid sequences of these two toxins were elucidated. Toxins Lc a and Lc b are different from each other at five positions of their sequences, namely at positions 31 (Phe/Ser), 32 (Leu/Ile), 33 (Lys/Arg), 50 (Pro/Arg) and 53 (Asp/His) (residues in parentheses give the residues in toxins Lc a and Lc b respectively). Toxins Lc a and Lc b have a novel structure in that they have only four disulphide bridges, although the whole amino acid sequences are homologous to those of other known long-chain neurotoxins. It is remarkable that toxins Lc a and Lc b are not coexistent at the detection error of 6% of the other toxin. Populations of Laticauda colubrina from the Solomon Islands and from the Philippines have either toxin Lc a or toxin Lc b and not both of them.  相似文献   

2.
The stopped-flow technique has been applied to observe the time dependence of a tryptophanyl fluorescence change upon binding of postsynaptic snake neurotoxins to nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (Narke japonica). Examination of the kinetics of the fluorescence change reflecting a conformational change in the receptor in the process of binding of 28 short neurotoxins and 8 long neurotoxins to the receptor has revealed the following. Short neurotoxins associate with the receptor more rapidly than do long neurotoxins. A positive charge on the side chains of residues 27 and 30 and the overall net charge of the toxin molecule governs the magnitude of the binding rates of toxins to the receptor. The invariant residue Asp-31 is important for neurotoxicity, but is not critical for binding ability with the receptor.This article was presented during the proceedings of the International Conference on Macromolecular Structure and Function, held at the National Defence Medical College, Tokorozawa, Japan, December 1985.  相似文献   

3.
The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) carries two binding sites for snake venom neurotoxins. alpha-Bungarotoxin from the Southeast Asian banded krait, Bungarus multicinctus, is a long neurotoxin which competitively blocks the nAChR at the acetylcholine binding sites in a relatively irreversible manner. Low angle x-ray diffraction was used to generate electron density profile structures at 14-A resolution for Torpedo californica nAChR membranes in the absence and presence of alpha-bungarotoxin. Analysis of the lamellar diffraction data indicated a 452-A lattice spacing between stacked nAChR membrane pairs. In the presence of alpha-bungarotoxin, the quality of the diffraction data and the lamellar lattice spacing were unchanged. In the plane of the membrane, the nAChRs packed together with a nearest neighbor distance of 80 A, and this distance increased to 85 A in the presence of toxin. Electron density profile structures were calculated in the absence and presence of alpha-bungarotoxin, revealing a location for the toxin binding sites. In native, fully-hydrated nAChR membranes, alpha-bungarotoxin binds to the nAChR outer vestibule and contacts the surface of the membrane bilayer.  相似文献   

4.
1. A neurotoxic protein similar to erabutoxins a and b of Laticauda semifasciata was isolated in crystalline form from the venoms of Laticauda laticaudata and Laticauda colubrina. The name ;laticotoxin a' is proposed. 2. Laticotoxin a is homogeneous by CM-cellulose column chromatography, disc electrophoresis and ultracentrifugation and by terminal amino acid analyses. 3. Laticotoxin a consists of 62 amino acid residues. The molecular weight by ultracentrifuging is 6520. 4. The minimal 50% lethal dose of laticotoxin a by intramuscular injection to mice is 0.13mug./g. body wt. The toxin attacks the postsynaptic membrane, competing with acetylcholine. 5. Radioactive amino acids are incorporated into laticotoxin a in vivo. The incorporation is inhibited by puromycin, suggesting that the biosynthesis of the toxin follows the mechanism of protein biosynthesis, although the toxin molecule is rather small as a protein.  相似文献   

5.
The alpha18-mer peptide, spanning residues 181-198 of the Torpedo nicotinic acetylcholine receptor alpha1 subunit, contains key binding determinants for agonists and competitive antagonists. To investigate whether the alpha18-mer can bind other alpha-neurotoxins besides alpha-bungarotoxin, we designed a two-dimensional (1)H-(15)N heteronuclear single quantum correlation experiment to screen four related neurotoxins for their binding ability to the peptide. Of the four toxins tested (erabutoxin a, erabutoxin b, LSIII, and alpha-cobratoxin), only alpha-cobratoxin binds the alpha18-mer to form a 1:1 complex. The NMR solution structure of the alpha-cobratoxin.alpha18-mer complex was determined with a backbone root mean square deviation of 1.46 A. In the structure, alpha-cobratoxin contacts the alpha18-mer at the tips of loop I and II and through C-terminal cationic residues. The contact zone derived from the intermolecular nuclear Overhauser effects is in agreement with recent biochemical data. Furthermore, the structural models support the involvement of cation-pi interactions in stabilizing the complex. In addition, the binding screen results suggest that C-terminal cationic residues of alpha-bungarotoxin and alpha-cobratoxin contribute significantly to binding of the alpha18-mer. Finally, we present a structural model for nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-alpha-cobratoxin interaction by superimposing the alpha-cobratoxin.alpha18-mer complex onto the crystal structure of the acetylcholine-binding protein (Protein Data Bank code ).  相似文献   

6.
Bacterially expressed cDNA fragments of the alpha-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor previously have been shown to bind alpha-bungarotoxin (Gershoni, J. M. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 84, 4318-4321). Here, a novel system has been developed in which totally synthetic alpha-bungarotoxin binding sites are expressed in Escherichia coli transformants. The amino acid sequences, alpha 184-200 and alpha 184-196 of the Torpedo californica alpha-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor were expressed as trpE fusion proteins via the expression vector pATH2 and a method for the enrichment of these fusion proteins is described. Quantitative analysis of toxin binding to the recombinant binding sites demonstrates that they bind toxin with affinities of KD = 2.5 X 10(-7) and 4.7 X 10(-6) M, respectively. Furthermore, the pharmacological profile of alpha 184-200 qualitatively reflects that of the intact receptor. These data not only indicate that the area of alpha 184-200 is an essential element of the cholinergic binding site but that residues alpha 197-200 contribute a point of contact between the receptor and alpha-bungarotoxin.  相似文献   

7.
The structure of a peptide corresponding to residues 182-202 of the acetylcholine receptor alpha1 subunit in complex with alpha-bungarotoxin was solved using NMR spectroscopy. The peptide contains the complete sequence of the major determinant of AChR involved in alpha-bungarotoxin binding. One face of the long beta hairpin formed by the AChR peptide consists of exposed nonconserved residues, which interact extensively with the toxin. Mutations of these receptor residues confer resistance to the toxin. Conserved AChR residues form the opposite face of the beta hairpin, which creates the inner and partially hidden pocket for acetylcholine. An NMR-derived model for the receptor complex with two alpha-bungarotoxin molecules shows that this pocket is occupied by the conserved alpha-neurotoxin residue R36, which forms cation-pi interactions with both alphaW149 and gammaW55/deltaW57 of the receptor and mimics acetylcholine.  相似文献   

8.
Acetylcholine receptor from Narke japonica electroplax exhibits a fluorescence change upon binding of snake neurotoxins. This fluorescence change primarily arises from the conformational change of the acetylcholine receptor and reflects the binding process of the toxin with the receptor. The time dependence of the fluorescence change has been monitored for 28 short neurotoxins and 8 long neurotoxins by using a stopped-flow technique. The steady-state fluorescence change is of the same order of magnitude for the short neurotoxins but varies among the long neurotoxins. Nha 10, a short neurotoxin with weak neurotoxicity, causes no fluorescence change in the receptor but can still bind to the receptor with sufficiently high affinity. The substitution of the conserved residue Asp-31 to Gly-31 in Nha is probably responsible for the reduced neurotoxicity. The rate constants for the binding of the neurotoxins to the receptor have been obtained by analyzing the transient fluorescence change. The rate constants show surprisingly a wide range of distribution: (1.0-20.5) X 10(6) M-1 s-1 for short neurotoxins and (0.26-1.9) X 10(6) M-1 s-1 for long neurotoxins. Examination of the relationship between the rate constants of fluorescence change of the short neurotoxins and their amino acid sequences, thermal stability, hydrogen-deuterium exchange behavior, overall net charge, etc. reveals the following. Positive charges on the side chains of residues 27 and 30 and overall net charge of the neurotoxin govern the magnitude of the binding rate of the neurotoxin with the receptor.  相似文献   

9.
T L Lentz  E Hawrot  P T Wilson 《Proteins》1987,2(4):298-307
Peptides corresponding to portions of loop 2 of snake venom curare-mimetic neurotoxins and to a structurally similar region of rabies virus glycoprotein were synthesized. Interaction of these peptides with purified Torpedo electric organ acetylcholine receptor was tested by measuring their ability to block the binding of 125I-labeled alpha-bungarotoxin to the receptor. In addition, inhibition of alpha-bungarotoxin binding to a 32-residue synthetic peptide corresponding to positions 173-204 of the alpha-subunit was determined. Neurotoxin and glycoprotein peptides corresponding to toxin loop 2 inhibited labeled toxin binding to the receptor with IC50 values comparable to those of nicotine and the competitive antagonist d-tubocurarine and to the alpha-subunit peptides with apparent affinities between those of d-tubocurarine and alpha-cobratoxin. Substitution of neurotoxin residue Arg37, the proposed counterpart of the quaternary ammonium of acetylcholine, with a negatively charged Glu residue reduced the apparent affinity about 10-fold. Peptides containing the neurotoxin invariant residue Trp29 and 10- to 100-fold higher affinities than peptides lacking this residue. These results demonstrate that relatively short synthetic peptides retain some of the binding ability of the native protein from which they are derived, indicating that such peptides are useful in the study of protein-protein interactions. The ability of the peptides to compete alpha-bungarotoxin binding to the receptor with apparent affinities comparable to those of other cholinergic ligands indicates that loop 2 of the neurotoxins and the structurally similar segment of the rabies virus glycoprotein act as recognition sites for the acetylcholine receptor. Invariant toxin residues Arg37 and Trp29 and their viral homologs play important, although not essential, roles in binding, possibly by interaction with complementary anionic and hydrophobic subsites on the acetylcholine receptor. The alpha-subunit peptide most likely contains all of the determinants for binding of the toxin and glycoprotein peptides present on the alpha-subunit, because these peptides bind to the 32-residue alpha-subunit peptide with the same or greater affinity as to the intact subunit.  相似文献   

10.
The binding of 125I-labeled rabies virus to a synthetic peptide comprising residues 173-204 of the alpha 1-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor was investigated. Binding of rabies virus to the receptor peptide was dependent on pH, could be competed with by unlabeled homologous virus particles, and was saturable. Synthetic peptides of snake venom, curaremimetic neurotoxins and of the structurally similar segment of the rabies virus glycoprotein, were effective in competing with labeled virus binding to the receptor peptide at micromolar concentrations. Similarly, synthetic peptides of the binding domain on the acetylcholine receptor competed for binding. These findings suggest that both rabies virus and neurotoxins bind to residues 173-204 of the alpha 1-subunit of the acetylcholine receptor. Competition studies with shorter alpha-subunit peptides within this region indicate that the highest affinity virus binding determinants are located within residues 179-192. A rat nerve alpha 3-subunit peptide, that does not bind alpha-bungarotoxin, inhibited binding of virus to the alpha 1 peptide, suggesting that rabies binds to neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. These studies indicate that synthetic peptides of the glycoprotein binding domain and of the receptor binding domain may represent useful antiviral agents by targeting the recognition event between the viral attachment protein and the host cell receptor, and inhibiting attachment of virus to the receptor.  相似文献   

11.
T L Lentz 《Biochemistry》1991,30(45):10949-10957
Peptides corresponding to portions of curaremimetic neurotoxin loop 2 and to a structurally similar segment of rabies virus glycoprotein were synthetically modified in order to gain information on structure-function relationships of neurotoxin loop 2 interactions with the acetylcholine receptor. Binding of synthetic peptides to the acetylcholine receptor of Torpedo electric organ membranes was assessed by measuring their ability to inhibit the binding of 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin to the receptor. The peptides showing the highest affinity for the receptor were a peptide corresponding to the sequence of loop 2 (residues 25-44) of Ophiophagus hannah (king cobra) toxin b (IC50 = 5.7 x 10(-6) M) and the structurally similar segment (residues 173-203) of CVS rabies virus glycoprotein (IC50 = 2.6 x 10(-6) M). These affinities were comparable to those of d-tubocurarine (IC50 = 3.4 x 10(-6) M) and suberyldicholine (IC50 = 2.5 x 10(-6) M). These results demonstrate the importance of loop 2 in the neurotoxin interaction with the receptor. N- and C-terminal deletions of the loop 2 peptides and substitution of residues invariant or highly conserved among neurotoxins were performed in order to determine the role of individual residues in binding. Residues 25-40 are the most crucial in the interaction with the acetylcholine receptor. Modifications involving Lys-27, Trp-29, Phe-33, Arg-37, and Gly-38 reduced affinity of binding. R37D and F33T modifications reduced the affinity of alpha-bungarotoxin residues 28-40 by an order of magnitude. Arg-37 may correspond to the positively charged quaternary ammonium group and Phe-33 to the hydrophobic acetyl methyl group of acetylcholine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Examination of 76 homologous neurotoxin sequences suggested that the "toxic" domain of these compounds consists of twelve highly conserved residues. Five of these, namely Lys-27, Trp-29, Asp-31, Arg-33 and Glu-38, together with a variant residue at position 36 are organized into a pattern which resembles that of d-tubocurarine. Two lines of experimental evidence are in agreement with the proposed topology of the "toxic" site in Naja nigricollis toxin alpha--Three highly conserved residues (Lys-27, Trp-29 and Lys-47) have been modified individually in toxin alpha. These modifications induce a decrease in binding affinity of toxin alpha for its target, the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. In contrast, modifications of three residues (Leu-1, Lys-15 and Lys-51) excluded from the "toxic" domain, do not alter the binding properties of toxin alpha.--Five toxin derivatives carrying a nitroxide group at residues 1, 15, 27, 47 or 51 have been prepared. ESR spectra have been recorded for each derivative in both the free state and bound to the receptor. Mobility of the probes of the residues excluded from the "toxic" site is not altered upon receptor binding. In contrast mobility of the nitroxide of the presumed "toxic" Lys-47 becomes markedly reduced after toxin receptor complex formation. Lys-27 nitroxide is immobilized in both the free and bound state. The antigenic structure of N. nigricollis toxin alpha has been partially clarified using two different approaches. --Fifteen antigenically important residues of toxin alpha have been identified by analyzing cross-reactions between toxin alpha and eleven homologous neurotoxins, using polyclonal antibodies.--- One monoclonal antibody (M alpha 1) specific for toxin alpha has been prepared. Competition experiments, made with (3H) toxin alpha, six mono modified toxin derivatives or alpha three homologous neurotoxins, showed that the binding site of (M alpha 1) comprises the N-terminal group, Lys-15, Pro-18 and probably Thr-16. This site is topographically different from the "toxic" domain. (M alpha 1) inhibits the toxicity of toxin alpha under both in vivo and in vitro conditions. In addition, (M alpha 1) is capable of "removing" toxin molecules bound to the receptor, allowing a rapid recovery of the functional properties of the receptor.  相似文献   

13.
The 270-MHz proton-nmr spectra of short neurotoxins (erabutoxins from Laticauda semifasciata and cobrotoxin from Naja naja atra) and long neurotoxins (toxin B from Naja naja and α-bungarotoxin from Bungarus multicinctus) have been analyzed. The conformation of erabutoxin b in solution is largely consistent with the x-ray crystal analysis, although the environment of His-7 in solution is definitely different from that in the crystal. The pH-dependent transition has been found for toxin B, indicating that the conformation in neutral solution is different from that in the crystal as grown from acidic solution. The deuterium-exchange rates of the amide protons for the four neurotoxins have been measured. The order of structural rigidity is the same as the order of the irreversibility of neuromuscular block by neurotoxins.  相似文献   

14.
15.
A fusion protein consisting of the TrpE protein and residues 166-211 of the Torpedo acetylcholine receptor alpha 1 subunit was produced in Escherichia coli using a pATH10 expression vector. Residues in the Torpedo sequence were changed by means of oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to residues present in snake alpha 1 subunit and rat nerve alpha 3 subunit which do not bind alpha-bungarotoxin. The fusion protein of the Torpedo sequence bound 125I-alpha-bungarotoxin with high affinity (IC50 = 2.5 x 10(-8) M from competition with unlabeled toxin, KD = 2.3 x 10(-8) M from equilibrium saturation binding data). Mutation of three Torpedo residues to snake residues, W184F, K185W, and W187S, had no effect on binding. Conversion of two additional Torpedo residues to snake, T191S and P194L, reduced alpha-bungarotoxin binding to undetectable levels. The P194L mutation alone abolished toxin binding. Mutation of three Torpedo alpha 1 residues to neuronal alpha 3-subunit residues, W187E, Y189K, and T191N, also abolished detectable alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Conversion of Try-189 to Asn which is present in the snake sequence (Y189N) abolished toxin binding. It is concluded that in the sequence of the alpha subunit of Torpedo encompassing Cys-192 and Cys-193, Try-189 and Pro-194 are important determinants of alpha-bungarotoxin binding. Tyr-189 may interact directly with cationic groups or participate in aromatic-aromatic interactions while Pro-194 may be necessary to maintain a conformation conductive to neurotoxin binding.  相似文献   

16.
The spatial structure of "long" toxin 3 Naja naja siamensis in solution has been studied by methods of two-dimensional (2D) 1H NMR spectroscopy. The individual signal assignments for 67 out of 71 residues and analysis of nuclear Overhauser effects between distinct protons of the molecule allowed the comparison of the toxin 3 conformations at different pH values and temperatures. It was shown that the deprotonated imidazole ring of His22 residue (at pH greater than or equal to 7,5) is surrounded by the side chains of Cys17, Pro18, Val23, Cys24, Cys45, Ala46 and Thr48 residues. On the contrary, the protonated imidazole ring of His22 (at pH less than 4,0) is exposed into solvent. Ionization of His22 is accompanied by a change in the Tyr25 aromatic ring orientation and affects the conformational mobility of the Cys17, His22, Cys45 and Ala47 side chains. The revealed conformational features of toxin 3 in solution are discussed in connection with the differences between "long" and "short" neurotoxins in the kinetics of their binding to acetylcholine receptor.  相似文献   

17.
R Kase  H Kitagawa  K Hayashi  K Tanoue  F Inagaki 《FEBS letters》1989,254(1-2):106-110
We prepared an alpha-bungarotoxin-specific monoclonal antibody that neutralizes the biological activity of the toxin in vivo. The antigenic determinant combining specifically with this antibody was determined on the basis of cross-reaction experiments using three other long neurotoxins and peptide fragments of alpha-bungarotoxin. The antigenic determinant was located on the peptide fragment containing S34-S35-R36-G37-K38, which forms a part of the expected site that binds to the acetylcholine receptor proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Actions of snake neurotoxins on an insect nicotinic cholinergic synapse   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Here we examine the actions of six snake neurotoxins (α-cobratoxin from Naja naja siamensis, erabutoxin-a and b from Laticauda semifasciata; CM12 from N. haje annulifera, toxin III 4 from Notechis scutatus and a long toxin from N. haje) on nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the cercal afferent, giant interneurone 2 synapse of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana. All toxins tested reduced responses to directly-applied ACh as well as EPSPs evoked by electrical stimulation of nerve XI with similar time courses, suggesting that their action is postsynaptic. Thus, these nicotinic receptors in a well-characterized insect synapse are senstive to both long and short chain neurotoxins. This considerably expands the range of snake toxins that block insect nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and may enable further pharmacological distinctions between nAChR subtypes.  相似文献   

19.
The major neurotoxin from the venom of Acalyptophis peronii captured in the Gulf of Thailand was isolated. Although there are two toxic fractions in the venom, the most toxic and abundant fraction was selected for purification and chemical characterization. The LD50 of the major toxin is 0.125 micrograms/g mice, indicating an extremely toxic nature. The toxin consists of 60 amino acid residues with methionine as the amino-terminal and asparagine as the carboxy-terminal end. It contains nine half-cystine residues. There is 1 mol each of tryptophan, tyrosine, methionine, valine, aspartic acid, leucine, and alanine, and there is no phenylalanine. The molecular weight calculated from the amino acid sequence determination was 6600. The toxin replaces alpha-bungarotoxin in binding with the acetylcholine receptor, indicating that the A. peronii major neurotoxin competes with alpha-bungarotoxin for the same binding site of the acetylcholine receptor.  相似文献   

20.
Samson AO  Chill JH  Anglister J 《Biochemistry》2005,44(32):10926-10934
A method for the measurement of proton T(1)(rho) relaxation times in unlabeled proteins is described using a variable spin-lock pulse after the initial nonselective 90 degrees excitation in a HOHAHA pulse sequence. The experiment is applied to alpha-bungarotoxin (alpha-BTX) and its complex with a 25-residue peptide derived from the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) alpha-subunit. A good correlation between high T(1)(rho) values and increased local motion is revealed. In the free form, toxin residues associated with receptor binding according to the NMR structure of the alpha-BTX complex with an AChR peptide and the model for alpha-BTX with the AChR [Samson, A. O., et al. (2002) Neuron 35, 319-332] display high mobility. When the AChR peptide binds, a decrease in the relaxation times and the level of motion of residues involved in binding of the receptor alpha-subunit is exhibited, while residues implicated in binding gamma- and delta-subunits retain their mobility. In addition, the quantitative T(1)(rho) measurements enable us to corroborate the mapping of boundaries of the AChR determinant strongly interacting with the toxin [Samson, A. O., et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 5464-5473] and can similarly be applied to other protein complexes in which peptides represent one of the two interacting proteins. The presented method is advantageous because of its simplicity, generality, and time efficiency and paves the way for future investigation of proton relaxation rates in small unlabeled proteins.  相似文献   

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