Conotoxin TVIIA, a novel peptide from the venom of Conus tulipa - 2. Three-dimensional solution structure


Autoria(s): Hill, JM; Alewood, PF; Craik, DJ
Data(s)

01/01/2000

Resumo

The three-dimensional solution structure of conotoxin TVIIA, a 30-residue polypeptide from the venom of the piscivorous cone snail Conus tulipa, has been determined using 2D H-1 NMR spectroscopy. TVIIA contains six cysteine residues which form a 'four-loop' structural framework common to many peptides from Conus venoms including the omega-, delta-, kappa-, and mu O-conotoxins. However, TVIIA does not belong to these well-characterized pharmacological classes of conotoxins, but displays high sequence identity with conotoxin GS, a muscle sodium channel blocker from Conus geographus. Structure calculations were based on 562 interproton distance restraints inferred from NOE data, together with 18 backbone and nine side-chain torsion angle restraints derived from spin-spin coupling constants. The final family of 20 structures had mean pairwise rms differences over residues 2-27 of 0.18 +/- 0.05 Angstrom for the backbone atoms and 1.39 +/- 0.33 Angstrom for all heavy atoms. The structure consists of a triple-stranded, antiparallel beta sheet with +2x, -1 topology (residues 7-9, 16-20 and 23-27) and several beta turns. The core of the molecule is formed by three disulfide bonds which form a cystine knot motif common to many toxic and inhibitory polypeptides. The global fold, molecular shape and distribution of amino-acid sidechains in TVIIA is similar to that previously reported for conotoxin GS, and comparison with other four-loop conotoxin structures provides further indication that TVIIA and GS represent a new and distinct subgroup of this structural family. The structure of TVIIA determined in this study provides the basis for determining a structure-activity relationship for these molecules and their interaction with target receptors.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:36574

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Cis Peptide Bond #4-trans-hydroxyproline #Nmr Spectroscopy #Nuclear-magnetic-resonance #3-dimensional Solution Structure #Relaxation Matrix Analysis #Muscle Sodium-channels #Common Amino-acids #Nmr-spectroscopy #Omega-conotoxin #Protein Structures #Secondary Structure #Coupling-constants
Tipo

Journal Article