Elapid venom toxins: multiple recruitments of ancient scaffolds

Fecha

1999-01

Autores

Alape Girón, Alberto
Persson, Bengt
Cederlund, Ella
Flores Díaz, Marietta
Gutiérrez, José María
Thelestam, Mónica
Bergman, Tomas
Jörnvall, Hans

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Resumen

Nigroxins A and B, two myotoxic phospholipases A2 (PLA2s) from the venom of the American elapid Micrurus nigrocinctus, belong to a new PLA2 subclass. Their primary structures were established and compared with those of PLA2s that have already been studied with respect to myotoxic activity. The combination of amino acid residues Arg15, Ala100, Asn108 and a hydrophobic residue at position 109 is present exclusively in class I PLA2s that display myotoxic activity. These residues cluster within a surface region rich in positive charges and are suggested to play a role in the interaction with the target membrane of the muscle fibers. It is concluded that the myotoxic PLA2s resulted from recruitment of an ancient scaffold. Dendrotoxins and alpha-neurotoxins are similarly derived from other old structures, which are, however, now also present in nontoxic proteins that are widely distributed throughout the animal kingdom. The evolutionary pathways by which elapid PLA2s acquired myotoxicity and dendrotoxins acquired K+-channel blocker activity are traced. They demonstrate how existing scaffolds were adapted stepwise to serve toxic functions by exchange of a few surface-exposed residues.

Descripción

Palabras clave

Phospholipases A2, Protein Evolution, Protein Family, Structural Comparisons, Toxic Site

Citación

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1432-1327.1999.00021.x/abstract

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