Evolutionary Diversification of Mesobuthus α-Scorpion Toxins Affecting Sodium Channels

被引:43
|
作者
Zhu, Shunyi [1 ]
Peigneur, Steve [2 ]
Gao, Bin [1 ]
Lu, Xiuxiu [3 ]
Cao, Chunyang [3 ]
Tytgat, Jan [2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Zool, State Key Lab Integrated Management Pest Insects, Grp Anim Innate Immun, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Leuven, Toxicol Lab, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, Shanghai Inst Organ Chem, State Key Lab Bioorgan & Nat Prod Chem, Shanghai 200032, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
BUTHUS-MARTENSI KARSCH; GATED ION CHANNELS; NA+-CHANNELS; BMK M1; MOLECULAR-MECHANISMS; ODONTHOBUTHUS-DORIAE; POSITIVE SELECTION; RAPID EVOLUTION; K+ CHANNEL; VENOM;
D O I
10.1074/mcp.M111.012054
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
alpha-Scorpion toxins constitute a family of peptide modulators that induce a prolongation of the action potential of excitable cells by inhibiting voltage-gated sodium channel inactivation. Although they all adopt a conserved structural scaffold, the potency and phylogentic preference of these toxins largely vary, which render them an intriguing model for studying evolutionary diversification among family members. Here, we report molecular characterization of a new multigene family of alpha-toxins comprising 13 members (named MeuNaTx alpha-1 to MeuNaTx alpha-13) from the scorpion Mesobuthus eupeus. Of them, five native toxins (MeuNaTx alpha-1 to -5) were purified to homogeneity from the venom and the solution structure of MeuNaTx alpha-5 was solved by nuclear magnetic resonance. A systematic functional evaluation of MeuNaTx alpha-1, -2, -4, and -5 was conducted by two-electrode voltage-clamp recordings on seven cloned mammalian voltage-gated sodium channels (Na(v)1.2 to Na(v)1.8) and the insect counterpart DmNa(v)1 expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Results show that all these four peptides slow inactivation of DmNa(v)1 and are inactive on Na(v)1.8 at micromolar concentrations. However, they exhibit differential specificity for the other six channel isoforms (Na(v)1.2 to Na(v)1.7), in which MeuNaTx alpha-4 shows no activity on these isoforms and thus represents the first Mesobuthus-derived insect-selective alpha-toxin identified so far with a half maximal effective concentration of 130 +/- 2 nM on DmNa(v)1 and a half maximal lethal dose of about 200 pmol g(-1) on the insect Musca domestica; MeuNaTx alpha-2 only affects Na(v)1.4; MeuNaTx alpha-1 and MeuNaTx alpha-5 have a wider range of channel spectrum, the former active on Na(v)1.2, Na(v)1.3, Na(v)1.6, and Na(v)1.7, whereas the latter acting on Na(v)1.3-Na(v)1.7. Remarkably, MeuNaTx alpha-4 and MeuNaTx alpha-5 are two nearly identical peptides differing by only one point mutation at site 50 (A50V) but exhibit rather different channel subtype selectivity, highlighting a switch role of this site in altering the target specificity. By the maximum likelihood models of codon substitution, we detected nine positively selected sites (PSSs) that could be involved in functional diversification of Mesobuthus alpha-toxins. The PSSs include site 50 and other seven sites located in functional surfaces of alpha-toxins. This work represents the first thorough investigation of evolutionary diversification of alpha-toxins derived from a specific scorpion lineage from the perspectives of sequence, structure, function, and evolution. Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 11: 10.1074/mcp.M111.012054, 1-18, 2012.
引用
收藏
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A common "hot spot" confers hERG blockade activity to α-scorpion toxins affecting K+ channels
    Abdel-Mottaleb, Yousra
    Corzo, Gerardo
    Martin-Eauclaire, Marie-France
    Satake, Honoo
    Ceard, Brigitte
    Peigneur, Steve
    Nambaru, Praveen
    Bougis, Pierre-Edouard
    Possani, Lourival D.
    Tytgat, Jan
    BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 2008, 76 (06) : 805 - 815
  • [42] Hadrurid Scorpion Toxins: Evolutionary Conservation and Selective Pressures
    Santibanez-Lopez, Carlos E.
    Graham, Matthew R.
    Sharma, Prashant P.
    Ortiz, Ernesto
    Possani, Lourival D.
    TOXINS, 2019, 11 (11)
  • [43] Phylogenomics of Scorpions Reveal Contemporaneous Diversification of Scorpion Mammalian Predators and Mammal-Active Sodium Channel Toxins
    Santibanez-Lopez, Carlos E.
    Aharon, Shlomi
    Ballesteros, Jesus A.
    Gainett, Guilherme
    Baker, Caitlin M.
    Gonzalez-Santillan, Edmundo
    Harvey, Mark S.
    Hassan, Mohamed K.
    Abu Almaaty, Ali Hussein
    Aldeyarbi, Shorouk Mohamed
    Monod, Lionel
    Ojanguren-Affilastro, Andres
    Pinto-da-Rocha, Ricardo
    Zvik, Yoram
    Gavish-Regev, Efrat
    Sharma, Prashant P.
    SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY, 2022, 71 (06) : 1281 - 1289
  • [44] Scorpion toxins:: Tools for studying K+ channels
    Garcia, ML
    Hanner, M
    Kaczorowski, GJ
    TOXICON, 1998, 36 (11) : 1641 - 1650
  • [45] Molecular biology of scorpion toxins active on potassium channels
    Legros, C
    Bougis, PE
    Martin-Eauclaire, MF
    PERSPECTIVES IN DRUG DISCOVERY AND DESIGN, 1999, 16 : 1 - 14
  • [46] Simulations of scorpion toxins and their interaction with K+ channels
    Bemporad, D
    Grottesi, A
    Robertson, G
    Sansom, M
    BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2004, 86 (01) : 513A - 513A
  • [47] A scorpion toxin affecting sodium channels shows double cis-trans isomerism
    Mineev, Konstantin S.
    Chernykh, Mikhail A.
    Motov, Vladislav V.
    Prudnikova, Daria A.
    Pavlenko, Daniil M.
    Kuzmenkov, Alexey I.
    Peigneur, Steve
    Tytgat, Jan
    Vassilevski, Alexander A.
    FEBS LETTERS, 2023, 597 (18) : 2358 - 2368
  • [48] Evolutionary diversification of TTX-resistant sodium channels in a predator–prey interaction
    Shana L. Geffeney
    Esther Fujimoto
    Edmund D. Brodie
    Edmund D. Brodie
    Peter C. Ruben
    Nature, 2005, 434 : 759 - 763
  • [49] Modulation of cloned skeletal muscle sodium channels by the scorpion toxins Lqh II, Lqh III, and LqhαIT
    H. Chen
    D. Gordon
    S.H. Heinemann
    Pflügers Archiv, 2000, 439 (4): : 423 - 432
  • [50] Miniaturization of scorpion β-toxins uncovers a putative ancestral surface of interaction with voltage-gated sodium channels
    Cohen, Lior
    Lipstein, Noa
    Karbat, Izhar
    Ilan, Nitza
    Gilles, Nicolas
    Kahn, Roy
    Gordon, Dalia
    Gurevitz, Michael
    JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 2008, 283 (22) : 15169 - 15176