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1.
A novel toxin was identified, purified and characterized from the venom of the Mexican scorpion Hadrurus gertschi (abbreviated HgeTx1). It has a molecular mass of 3950 atomic mass units (a.m.u.) and contains 36 amino acids with four disulfide bridges established between Cys1–Cys5, Cys2–Cys6, Cys3–Cys7 and Cys4–Cys8. It blocks reversibly the Shaker B K+-channels with a Kd of 52 nM. HgeTx1 shares 60%, 45% and 40% sequence identity, respectively, with Heterometrus spinnifer toxin1 (HsTX1), Scorpio maurus K+-toxin (maurotoxin) and Pandinus imperator toxin1 (Pi1), all four-disulfide bridged toxins. It is 57–58% identical with the other scorpion K+-channel toxins that contain only three disulfide bridges. Sequence comparison, chain length and number of disulfide bridges analysis classify HgeTx1 into subfamily 6 of the -KTx scorpion toxins (systematic name: -KTx 6.14).  相似文献   

2.
Scorpion venoms contain a large number of bioactive components. Several of the long-chain peptides were shown to be responsible for neurotoxic effects, due to their ability to recognize Na+ channels and to cause impairment of channel functions. Here, we revisited the basic paradigms in the study of these peptides in the light of recent data concerning their structure–function relationships, their functional divergence and extant biodiversity. The reviewed topics include: the criteria for classification of long-chain peptides according to their function, and a revision of the state-of-the-art knowledge concerning the surface areas of contact of these peptides with known Na+ channels. Additionally, we compiled a comprehensive list encompassing 191 different amino acid sequences from long-chain peptides purified from scorpion venoms. With this dataset, a phylogenetic tree was constructed and discussed taking into consideration their documented functional divergence. A critical view on problems associated with the study of these scorpion peptides is presented, drawing special attention to the points that need revision and to the subjects under intensive research at this moment, regarding scorpion toxins specific for Na+ channels and the other related long-chain peptides recently described.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Scorpion venoms are very complex mixtures of molecules, most of which are peptides displaying different kinds of biological activity. Indeed, these peptides specifically bind to a variety of pharmacological targets, in particular ionic channels located in prey tissues, resulting in neurotoxic effects. Toxins modulating Na+, K+, Ca2+ and Cl(-) currents have been described in scorpion venoms. In this work, we have used several specific antibodies raised against the most lethal scorpion toxins already described to screen the Moroccan scorpion Androctonus mauretanicus mauretanicus venom in order to characterize new compounds. This immunological screening was also implemented by toxicity tests in mice and with mass spectrometry study, providing new informations on the molecular composition of this venom. In fine, we were able to determine the molecular masses of 70-80 different compounds. According to the immunological data obtained, many toxins cross-react with three sera raised against the most lethal alpha-toxins found in North African scorpion venoms, but not at all with those raised against the main beta-toxins from South and North American venoms. Some of the previously described toxins from Androctonus mauretanicus mauretanicus venom could thus be detected by combining immunological tests, toxicity in mice and molecular masses. Among these toxins, one of them, which showed a mild cross-reaction with the serum raised against AaH I (a highly potent toxin from the venom of Androctonus australis), was identified as Amm III and fully sequenced.  相似文献   

5.
Toxin determinants required for interaction with voltage-gated K channels   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Ion channel-acting toxins are mainly short peptides generally present in minute amounts in the venoms of diverse animal species such as scorpions, snakes, spiders, marine cone snails and sea anemones. Interestingly, these peptides have evolved over time on the basis of clearly distinct architectural motifs present throughout the animal kingdom, but display convergent molecular determinants and functional homologies. As a consequence of this conservation of some key determinants, it has also been evidenced that toxin targets display some common evolutionary origins. Indeed, these peptides often target ion channels and ligand-gated receptors, though other interacting molecules such as enzymes have been further evidenced. In this review, we provide an overview of some selected peptides from various animal species that act on specific K+ conducting voltage-gated ion channels. In particular, we emphasize our global analysis on the structural determinants of these molecules that are required for the recognition of a particular ion channel pore structure, a property that should be correlated to the blocking efficacy of the K+ efflux out of the cell during channel opening. A better understanding of these molecular determinants is valuable to better specify and derive useful peptide pharmacological properties.  相似文献   

6.
Venoms were collected from two scorpion species: Parabuthus leiosoma and Parabuthus pallidus from Kenya. Subcutaneous injection and oral toxicity tests of crude and pure fractions of scorpion venoms were done in Mus musculus (mice), Chilo partellus and Busseola fusca. The highest activity against C. partellus was found in P. leiosoma venom (LC(50) 0.689 mg/50mg body weight). Bioassay-guided purification by a combination of cation-exchange (CE) and reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) led to the isolation of three toxic peptides. A lepidopteran-selective toxin (P. leiosoma insect toxin, Plit) was isolated, and the partial N-terminal amino acid sequence (-KDGYPVDNANCKYE-) plus the molecular weight (6688.5 Da) determined. A peptide with significant insect toxicity coupled with mild effects on mice (P. leiosoma toxin, Plt) was isolated, and the partial N-terminal amino acid sequence (-LCEKFKVQRLVELNCVD-) plus the molecular weight (6742.5 Da) was determined. Another toxin with anti-mammalian activity (P. leisoma mammal-selective toxin, Plmt), and N-terminal partial amino acid sequence of ADVPGNYPLDKNGNRYY- plus a molecular weight of 7145.5 Da was also isolated. Comparison of the partial N-terminal amino acid sequences with other toxins revealed that Plit shows high homology to other known insect toxins. Similarly, Plmt shows high homology with several birtoxin-like anti-mammalian toxins. Plt does not exhibit homology with any known scorpion toxin with combined anti-insect and anti-mammalian activity.  相似文献   

7.
《Toxin reviews》2013,32(2-3):181-221
Abstract

Scorpion venoms are complex mixtures of mucous, low molecular weight components (salts and organic compounds) and many basic, neurotoxic proteins (MR < 8000). These neurotoxins alter the properties of Na channels in excitable cells in three ways. One group of toxins delays inactivation of the Na channel, thereby greatly prolonging the action potential. A second effect, produced by other scorpion toxins, is a transient shift in the voltage dependence of activation, which is demonstrated upon application of a depolarizing pulse. This effect, shown thus far only by toxins from New World species of scorpions, results in an increased tendency of the cell to fire spontaneously and repetitively. The third effect produced by some of the toxins is a reduction of ionic currents (both Na and K currents) with no changes in the kinetics of activation and inactivation. Many observations from pathophysiological studies with scorpion venoms and isolated toxins can be explained on the basis of their effects on Na channels.

The three-dimensional structure of one scorpion toxin (Toxin Var3) is known. Because of homology in the amino acid sequences of many different scorpion toxins, it is believed that the structure proposed for Toxin Var3 from Centruroides sculpturatus (Fig. 2 and 3) is typical of the scorpion toxins in general. Featured in this structure are a dense core of protein secondary structure and a surface hydrophobic patch. Many of the conserved amino acids in the scorpion toxins are associated with this patch thus suggesting that this part of the structure is associated with the biological action of the toxins.  相似文献   

8.
Electrophysiological investigations have previously suggested that phospholipase A2 (PLA2) neurotoxins from snake venoms increase the release of acetylcholine (Ach) at the neuromuscular junction by blocking voltage-gated K+ channels in motor nerve terminals.

We have tested some of the most potent presynaptically-acting neurotoxins from snake venoms, namely β-bungarotoxin (BuTx), taipoxin, notexin, crotoxin, ammodytoxin C and A (Amotx C & A), for effects on several types of cloned voltage-gated K+ channels (mKv1.1, rKv1.2, mKv1.3, hKv1.5 and mKv3.1) stably expressed in mammalian cell lines. By use of the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp recording technique and concentrations of toxins greater than those required to affect acetylcholine release, these neurotoxins have been shown not to block any of these voltage-gated K+ channels. In addition, internal perfusion of the neurotoxins (100 μg/ml) into mouse B82 fibroblast cells that expressed rKv1.2 channels also did not substantially depress K+ currents. The results of this study suggest that the mechanism by which these neurotoxins increase the release of acetylcholine at the neuromuscular junction is not related to the direct blockage of voltage-activated Kv1.1, Kv1.2, Kv1.3, Kv1.5 and Kv3.1 K+ channels.  相似文献   


9.
The K+ channel encoded by the Ether-á-go-go-Related Gene (ERG) is expressed in different tissues of different animal species. There are at least three subtypes of this channel, being the sub-type 1 (ERG1) crucial in the repolarization phase of the cardiac action potential. Mutations in this gene can affect the properties of the channel producing the type II long QT syndrome (LQTS2) and many drugs are also known to affect this channel with a similar side effect. Various scorpion, spider and sea anemone toxins affect the ERG currents by blocking the ion-conducting pore from the external side or by modulating channel gating through binding to the voltage-sensor domain. By doing so, these toxins become very useful tools for better understanding the structural and functional characteristics of these ion channels. This review discusses the interaction between the ERG channels and the peptides isolated from venoms of these animals. Special emphasis is placed on scorpion toxins, although the effects of several spider venom toxins and anemone toxins will be also revised.  相似文献   

10.
Three novel scorpion toxins, Aa1 from Androctonus australis, BmTX3 from Buthus martensi and AmmTX3 from Androctonus mauretanicus were shown able to selectively block A-type K+ currents in cerebellum granular cells or cultured striatum neurons from rat brain. In electrophysiology experiments, the transient A-current completely disappeared when 1 μM of the toxins was applied to the external solution whereas the sustained K+ current was unaffected.

The three toxins shared high sequence homologies (more than 94%) and constituted a new ‘short-chain’ scorpion toxin subfamily: -KTx15. Monoiododerivative of 125I-sBmTX3 specifically bound to rat brain synaptosomes. Under equilibrium binding conditions, maximum binding was 14 fmol/mg of protein and the dissociation constant (Kd) was 0.21 nM. This Kd value was confirmed by kinetic experiments (kon=6.0×106 M−1 s−1 and koff=6.0×10−4 s−1). Competitions with AmmTX3 and Aa1 with 125I-sBmTX3 bound to its receptor on rat brain synaptosomes showed that they fully inhibited the 125I-sBmTX3 binding (Ki values of 20 and 44 pM, respectively), demonstrating unambiguously that the three molecules shared the same target in rat brain. A panel of toxins described as specific ligands for different K+, Na+ and Ca2+ channels were not able to displace 125I-sBmTX3 from its binding site. Thus, 125I-sBmTX3 is a new ligand for a still unidentified target in rat brain. In autoradiography, the distribution of 125I-sBmTX3 binding sites in the adult rat brain indicated a high density of 125I-sBmTX3 receptors in the striatum, hippocampus, superior colliculus, and cerebellum.  相似文献   


11.
The yellow Iranian scorpion Odontobuthus doriae can cause fatal envenoming, but its mechanism of action is unclear. One of the reported manifestations of envenoming is moderate to severe involuntary tremor of skeletal muscle. In order to understand better the mechanism of action of this venom on skeletal muscle function, we examined the effects of the venom in vitro on chick biventer cervicis (CBC) and mouse hemidiaphragm (MHD) nerve muscle preparations. O. doriae venom (0.3–10 μg/ml) initially increased and then decreased twitch height. The venom also caused contracture in both preparations. In mouse triangularis sterni preparations, used for all intracellular recording techniques, the venom enhanced the release of acetylcholine and induced repetitive firing of nerve action potentials and endplate potentials in response to single-shock stimulation. With extracellular recording techniques, scorpion venom (1 μg/ml) was found to cause changes to the perineural waveform associated with nerve terminal action potentials consistent with effects on Na+ and K+ currents. The main facilitatory effects of O. doriae venom are likely to be due to toxins that affect Na+ channels in nerve–muscle preparations similar to most Old World scorpion venoms, but blocking effects on K+ channels are also possible. Such effects could lead to initial enhancement of transmitter release that could underlie the muscle tremors seen in victims. Toxins acting on Na+ and K+ currents have been isolated from the venom [Jalali, A., Bosmans, F., Amininasab, M., Clynen, E., Cuypers, E., Zaremirakabadi, A., Sarbolouki, M.N., Schoofs, L., Vatanpour, H., Tytgat, J., 2005. OD1, the first toxin isolated from the venom of the scorpion Odontobuthus doriae active on voltage-gated Na+ channels. FEBS Lett. 579, 4181–4186; Abdel-Mottaleb, Y., Clynen, E., Jalali, A., Bosmans, F., Vatanpour, H., Schoofs, L., Tytgat, J., 2006. The first potassium channel toxin from the venom of the Iranian scorpion Odontobuthus doriae. FEBS Lett. 580, 6254–6258]; however, the muscle paralysis seen at higher concentrations of venom may be due to additional, as yet uncharacterised, components of the venom.  相似文献   

12.
1. The autonomic effects of venoms and toxins from several species of scorpions, including the Indian red scorpion Mesobuthus tamulus, the Chinese scorpion Buthus martensi Karsch and the Israeli scorpion Leiurus quinquestriatus quinquestriatus, all belonging to Buthidae, and the Asian black scorpions Heterometrus longimanus and Heterometrus spinifer, belonging to Scorpionidae, are reviewed. 2. The effects of the venoms of M. tamulus and L. q. quinquestriatus on noradrenergic and nitrergic transmission in the rat isolated anococcygeus muscle revealed that both venoms mediated their pharmacological effects via a prejunctional mechanism involving the activation of voltage-sensitive sodium channels with consequent release of neurotransmitters that mediate target organ responses, similar to the effects mediated by other alpha-scorpion toxins. 3. Two new toxins, Makatoxin I and Bukatoxin, were purified to homogeneity from the venom of B. martensi Karsch. Determination of their complete amino acid sequences confirmed that both toxins belonged to the class of alpha-scorpion toxins. The effects of both toxins on noradrenergic and nitrergic transmission in the rat anococcygeus muscle provided firm evidence that their pharmacological actions also closely resembled those mediated by other alpha-scorpion toxins on neuronal voltage-sensitive sodium channels. 4. The venoms of H. longimanus and H. spinifer were found to have high concentrations of noradrenaline (1.8 +/- 0.3 mmol/L) and relatively high concentrations of acetylcholine (79.8 +/- 1.7 micromol/L) together with noradrenaline (146.7 +/- 19.8 micromol/L), respectively, which can account for their potent direct cholinergic and noradrenergic agonist actions in the rat anococcygeus muscle. 5. Our studies confirmed that the rat anococcygeus muscle is an excellent nerve-smooth muscle preparation for investigating the effects of bioactive agents on noradrenergic and nitrergic transmission, as well as the direct agonist actions of these agents on post-synaptic alpha-adrenoceptors and M3 muscarinic cholinoceptors. Although many studies, including our own, have documented that scorpion venoms and toxins mediate their primary effects via a prejunctional mechanism that leads to the marked release of various autonomic neurotransmitters, our studies have shown that there are exceptions to this generally accepted phenomenon. In particular, we have provided firm evidence to show that the venoms from H. longimanus and H. spinifer do not have such a prejunctional site of action but, instead, the venoms mediate their autonomic effects through direct agonist actions on post-junctional muscarinic M3 cholinoceptors and alpha-adrenoceptors.  相似文献   

13.
Ziyi Chen  Giridher Reddy  Richard Hahin   《Toxicon》2000,38(12):359-1832
Two peptides that extensively prolong action potentials (APs) in rat and frog nerves have been isolated and purified from the venom of the scorpion Buthus martensii Karsch (BMK). The peptides were purified using gel filtration, ion exchange, FPLC, and HPLC chromatography. Action potentials recorded in the presence of nanomolar concentrations of the peptides were extensively prolonged without much attenuation in their heights. The N-terminal sequences of both the peptides, BMK 9(3)-1 and BMK 9(3)-2, were determined. The N-terminal sequences of BMK 9(3)-1 and BMK 9(3)-2 were found to be: GRDAYIADSEN-PYF-GANPN and GRDAYIADSEN-PYT-ALNP. Sequence similarity comparisons to other -scorpion toxins suggest that the two blanks in each of the sequences are cysteines. The first 20 residues of the two BMK peptides differ by only three amino acid substitutions. The molecular weight (MW) of BMK 9(3)-1 and BMK 9(3)-2 were determined by LC/MS/MS to be 7020 and 7037 Da. Since both of the peptides prolong APs when both K+ and Ca++ channels are blocked and show sequence similarity to other -neurotoxins, it appears likely that BMK 9(3)-1 and BMK 9(3)-2 act to alter Na channel inactivation to produce their effects. The first 20 residues of BMK 9(3)-2 are identical to those observed for makatoxin I, a toxin isolated from Buthus martensii Karsch venom, that alters nitric oxide transmitter release. Since the two toxins also have very similar molecular weights, BMK 9(3)-2 may be identical to makatoxin I; however, BMK 9(3)-2 acts to alter Na channels to exert its effect, thus the two toxins may differ, or if they are identical, they can exert effects on both neural transmission and AP propagation.  相似文献   

14.
SCORPION, a molecular database of scorpion toxins.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Increasing interest in the studies of toxins and the requirements for better structural and functional annotations have created a need for improved data management in the field of toxins. The molecular database, SCORPION, contains more than 200 entries of fully referenced scorpion toxin data including primary sequences, three-dimensional structures, structural and functional annotations of scorpion toxins along with relevant literature references. SCORPION has a set of search tools that allow users to extract data and perform specific queries. These entries have been compiled from public databases and literature, cleaned of errors and enriched with additional structural and functional information. The grouping of scorpion toxins provides a basis for extending and clarifying the existing structural and functional classifications. The bioinformatics modules in SCORPION facilitate analyses aimed at classification of scorpion toxins and identification of sequence patterns associated with specific structural or functional properties of scorpion toxins. The SCORPION database is accessible via the Internet at sdmc.krdl.org.sg:8080/scorpion.  相似文献   

15.
KAaH1 and KAaH2 are non-toxic peptides, isolated from the venom of the Androctonus australis hector (Aah) scorpion. In a previous study, we showed these peptides to be the most abundant (approximately 10% each) in the toxic fraction (AahG50) of the Aah venom. KAaH1 and KAaH2 showed high sequence identities (approximately 60%) with birtoxin-like peptides, which likewise are the major peptidic components of Parabuthus transvaalicus scorpion venom. Here, we report the immunological characterization of KAaH1 and KAaH2. These peptides were found to be specifically recognized by polyclonal antibodies raised against AahII, the most toxic peptide of Aah venom, and represents the second antigenic group, including toxins from different scorpion species in the world. Moreover, KAaH1 partially inhibits AahII binding to its specific antibody, suggesting some common epitopes between these two peptides. The identification of possible key antigenic residues in KAaH1 was deduced from comparison of its 3-D model with the experimental structure of AahII. Two clusters of putative antigenically important residues were found at the exposed surface; one could be constituted of V3 and D53, the other of D10, T15 and Y16. Polyclonal antibodies raised against KAaH1 in mice were found to cross-react with both AahII and AahG50, and neutralizing 5LD(50)/ml of the toxic fraction. Mice vaccinated with KAaH1 were protected against a challenge of 2LD(50) of AahG50 fraction. All these data suggest that KAaH1 has clear advantages over the use of the whole or part of the venom. KAaH1 is not toxic and could produce sera-neutralizing scorpion toxins, not only from Aah venom, but also toxins of other venoms from Buthus, Leiurus, or Parabuthus scorpion species presenting antigenically related toxins.  相似文献   

16.
M el Ayeb  H Rochat 《Toxicon》1985,23(5):755-760
Using highly specific radioimmunoassays for toxins I, II and III of the scorpion Androctonus australis Hector, the concentrations of these neurotoxins have been determined in pooled as well as in individual samples. Variations were found that support polymorphism of scorpion toxins at an individual level. Radioimmunoassays were also used to detect toxin I of Buthus occitanus tunetanus and toxin II of Androctonus australis Hector and also antigenically homologous toxins in the venoms of several North African scorpions. These results are interpreted in terms of scorpion serotherapy.  相似文献   

17.
Two almost identical proteins with 70 amino acid residues each, closely packed by four disufide bridges, and molecular masses of 7899.5 and 7884.7 were isolated and sequenced from the venom of the scorpion Isometrus vittatus from Pakistan. They differ by an acidic amino acid residue (glutamic or aspartic) at the same position 55 of the peptide chain, however, they exhibit the same length, the same charge and are undistinguishable when separated by C18 reverse phase HPLC. The mixture of the two proteins called IsomTx1 depolarizes the cockroach isolated axon; artificial repolarization is followed by sustained repetitive activity, artificial hyperpolarization facilitates bursting activity observed as an answer to rapid depolarization to −60 mV. The depolarization is antagonized by TTX. In voltage-clamp experiments IsomTx1 increases axonal sodium permeability which has a particular importance between resting and threshold potentials and moderately slows down the fast inactivation. These characteristics closely resemble those of other anti-insect scorpion toxins classified as contractive toxins from Androctonus and Buthotus venoms.  相似文献   

18.
Scorpion venoms contain a variety of peptides toxic to mammals, insects and crustaceans. Most of the scorpion toxins have been isolated from the venoms of scorpions in the family Buthidae, but little interest has been paid to non-Buthidae scorpions. In this study, we isolated a short-chain insecticidal toxin (LaIT1) from the venom of the scorpion Liocheles australasiae belonging to the Hemiscorpiidae family. This toxin showed insect toxicity against crickets at a dose of 1.0 microg/insect, but no toxicity was observed against mice even after injection of 1.0 microg of LaIT1 via the intracerebroventricular route, suggesting that the effect of the toxin is insect-selective. Edman sequencing and mass spectrometric analysis revealed that the toxin is composed of 36 amino acid residues and cross-linked by only two disulfide bridges. The pattern of the disulfide bridges was assigned by LC/MS analysis after enzymatic digestion. LaIT1 shows no sequence homology to any other known toxins, suggesting that this toxin represents a novel structural motif class.  相似文献   

19.
Novel interactions between K+ channels and scorpion toxins   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
K(+) channels are macromolecules embedded in biological membranes, where they play a key role in cellular excitability and signal transduction pathways. Knowledge of their structure should help improve our understanding of their function and lead to the design of therapeutic compounds. Most pharmacological and structural characteristics of these channels have been elucidated by using high-affinity channel blockers isolated from scorpion venoms. Recent data on the three-dimensional structures of K(+) channels and novel scorpion toxins suggest a variety of novel interacting modes of these channels and toxins, which should help increase our understanding of the K(+) channel structure-function relationship.  相似文献   

20.
The venom of the scorpion Buthacus macrocentrus of Turkey was fractionated by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and its mass finger print analysis was obtained by spectrometry. More than 70 different fractions were obtained, allowing the determination of the molecular masses of at least 60 peptides ranging between 648 and 44,336 Da. The venom is enriched with peptides containing molecular masses between 3200–4500 Da, and 6000–7500 Da. They very likely correspond to K+-channel and Na+-channel specific peptides, respectively, as expected from venoms of scorpions of the family Buthidae, already determined for other species. The major component obtained from HPLC was shown to be lethal to mice and was further purified and characterized. It contains 65 amino acid residues maintained closely packed by 4 disulfide bridges, and shows a molecular weight of 7263 Da. Additionally, a cDNA from the venomous glands of this scorpion was used in conjunction with sequence data from Edman degradation and mass spectrometry for cloning the gene that codes for Bu1 as we named this toxin. This gene codes for a 67 amino acid residues peptide, where the two last are eliminated post-translationally for production of an amidated C-terminal arginine. Its sequence is closely related to toxins from the species Leiurus quinquestriatus, as revealed by a phylogenetic tree analysis. Electrophysiological results conducted with Bu1 using patch-clamp techniques indicate that it modifies the Na+ currents, in a similar way as other well known α-scorpion toxins. These results support the conclusion that this species of scorpions is dangerous to humans, having an epidemiological interest for the country.  相似文献   

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