A Potassium‐Channel Toxin From the Sea Anemone Bunodosoma Granulifera, An Inhibitor for Kv1 Channels — Revision of the Amino Acid Sequence, Disulfide‐Bridge Assignment, Chemical Synthesis, and Biological Activity
Open Access
- 1 February 1997
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in European Journal of Biochemistry
- Vol. 244 (1) , 192-202
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1997.00192.x
Abstract
The potassium channel toxin secreted by the sea anemone Bunodosoma granulifera (BgK) is a 37-amino-acid peptide containing three disulfide bridges. Because a synthetic peptide corresponding to the reported sequence of BgK was found not to fold properly, the sequence was determined again. The new sequence differed from the previous one in the C-terminal tetrapeptide, which contains two cysteines involved in disulfide bridging. The revised sequence is: V C R D W F K E T A C R H A K S L G N C R T S Q K Y R A N C A K T C E L C. The toxin BgK was synthesized according according to the new sequence and folded successfully. Disulfide bridges were assigned by peptide mapping on both natural and synthetic forms to be between Cys2-Cys37, Cys11-Cys30 and Cys20-Cys34. The toxin contains a C-terminal free carboxylate as shown by comparing the native toxin with two synthetic peptides containing the C-terminus in either the carboxylate or carboxamido form. Synthetic BgK inhibits binding of 125I-α-dendrotoxin to rat brain synaptosomal membranes, similarly to natural BgK (nanomolar range). No activity was observed on maxi-K+ channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. The ability of BgK to block voltage-dependent K+ channels was determined from recordings of whole cell currents in Xenopus oocytes injected with cRNA encoding three cloned Kv1 channels (Kv1.1, Kv1.2, Kv1.3) and one Kv3 (Kv3.1) channel. The Shaker-related Kv1 channels are equally affected by BgK, while the Shaw-related channel Kv3.1 is insensitive up to 0.125 pM toxin. Indeed, half blockage of the current through the three Kv1 channels tested occurred in the same concentration range (Kd= 6 nM for Kv1.1, 15 nM for Kv1.2, 10 nM for Kv1.3). The specificity of BgK for the Shaker-related K+ channels indicates that BgK is able to discriminate a large group of neuronal Kv1 channels in situ. The sequence, the disulfide bridge pattern, the secondary structure and the biological activity of BgK demostrated that the sea anemone toxins, i.e. BgK, ShK and Kaliseptine, constitute novel molecular probes useful for investigating K+ channel properties.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Topology of the pore-region of a K+ channel revealed by the NMR-derived structures of scorpion toxinsPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- An inhibitor of the Kv2.1 potassium channel isolated from the venom of a Chilean tarantulaNeuron, 1995
- Transfer of the scorpion toxin receptor to an insensitive potassium channelNeuron, 1994
- The charybdotoxin receptor of a Shaker K+ channel: Peptide and channel residues mediating molecular recognitionNeuron, 1994
- Intimations of potassium channel structure from a complete functional map of the molecular surface of charybdotoxinBiochemistry, 1994
- Interaction of charybdotoxin with permeant ions inside the pore of a K+ channelNeuron, 1992
- Mechanism of iberiotoxin block of the large-conductance calcium-activated potassium channel from bovine aortic smooth muscleBiochemistry, 1992
- Determination of the subunit stoichiometry of a voltage-activated potassium channelNature, 1991
- Mapping the receptor site for charybdotoxin, a pore-blocking potassium channel inhibitorNeuron, 1990
- Relationship between the inhibition constant (KI) and the concentration of inhibitor which causes 50 per cent inhibition (I50) of an enzymatic reactionBiochemical Pharmacology, 1973