Chemical and functional identification and characterization of novel sulfated alpha-conotoxins from the cone snail Conus anemone


Autoria(s): Loughnan, M. L.; Nicke, A.; Jones, A.; Adams, D. J.; Alewood, P. F.; Lewis, R. J.
Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

An LC/MS analysis with diagnostic screening for the detection of peptides with posttranslational modifications revealed the presence of novel sulfated peptides within the -conotoxin molecular mass range in Conus anemone crude venom. A functional assay of the extract showed activity at several neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). Three sulfated alpha-conotoxins (AnIA, AnIB, and AnIC) were identified by LC/MS and assay-directed fractionation and sequenced after purification. The most active of these, alpha-AnIB, was further characterized and used to investigate the influence of posttranslational modifications on affinity. Synthetic AnIB exhibited subnanomolar potency at the rat alpha3/beta2 nAChR (IC50 0.3 nM) and was 200-fold less active on the rat alpha7 nAChR (IC50 76 nM). The unsulfated peptide [Tyr(16)]AnIB showed a 2-fold and 10-fold decrease in activities at alpha3beta2 (IC50 0.6 nM) and alpha7(IC50 836 nM) nAChR, respectively. Likewise, removal of the C-terminal amide had a greater influence on potency at the alpha7 (IC50 367 nM) than at the alpha3beta2 nAChR (IC50 0.5 nM). Stepwise removal of two N-terminal glycine residues revealed that these residues affect the binding kinetics of the peptide. Comparison with similar 4/7-alpha-conotoxin sequences suggests that residue 11 (alanine or glycine) and residue 14 (glutamine) constitute important determinants for alpha3beta2 selectivity, whereas the C-terminal amidation and sulfation at tyrosine-16 favor alpha7 affinity.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:73934

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Chemical Society

Palavras-Chave #Nicotinic Acetylcholine-receptors #Subtype Selectivity #Tyrosine Sulfation #Mass-spectrometry #Peptides #Pnia #Electrospray #Antagonists #Proteins #Cells #Chemistry, Medicinal #C1 #250302 Biological and Medical Chemistry #780103 Chemical sciences
Tipo

Journal Article