1. Novel analgesic ω-conotoxins from the vermivorous cone snail Conus moncuri provide new insights into the evolution of conopeptides.
- Author
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Sousa SR, McArthur JR, Brust A, Bhola RF, Rosengren KJ, Ragnarsson L, Dutertre S, Alewood PF, Christie MJ, Adams DJ, Vetter I, and Lewis RJ
- Subjects
- Analgesics pharmacology, Analgesics therapeutic use, Animals, Calcium Channel Blockers pharmacology, Calcium Channel Blockers therapeutic use, Calcium Channels, N-Type metabolism, Cell Line, Tumor, Cells, Cultured, Ganglia, Spinal cytology, Humans, Neuralgia drug therapy, Neurons, Afferent drug effects, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Snails, omega-Conotoxins genetics, omega-Conotoxins pharmacology, omega-Conotoxins therapeutic use, Analgesics chemistry, Calcium Channel Blockers chemistry, Evolution, Molecular, omega-Conotoxins chemistry
- Abstract
Cone snails are a diverse group of predatory marine invertebrates that deploy remarkably complex venoms to rapidly paralyse worm, mollusc or fish prey. ω-Conotoxins are neurotoxic peptides from cone snail venoms that inhibit Ca
v 2.2 voltage-gated calcium channel, demonstrating potential for pain management via intrathecal (IT) administration. Here, we isolated and characterized two novel ω-conotoxins, MoVIA and MoVIB from Conus moncuri, the first to be identified in vermivorous (worm-hunting) cone snails. MoVIA and MoVIB potently inhibited human Cav 2.2 in fluorimetric assays and rat Cav 2.2 in patch clamp studies, and both potently displaced radiolabeled ω-conotoxin GVIA (125 I-GVIA) from human SH-SY5Y cells and fish brain membranes (IC50 2-9 pM). Intriguingly, an arginine at position 13 in MoVIA and MoVIB replaced the functionally critical tyrosine found in piscivorous ω-conotoxins. To investigate its role, we synthesized MoVIB-[R13Y] and MVIIA-[Y13R]. Interestingly, MVIIA-[Y13R] completely lost Cav 2.2 activity and MoVIB-[R13Y] had reduced activity, indicating that Arg at position 13 was preferred in these vermivorous ω-conotoxins whereas tyrosine 13 is preferred in piscivorous ω-conotoxins. MoVIB reversed pain behavior in a rat neuropathic pain model, confirming that vermivorous cone snails are a new source of analgesic ω-conotoxins. Given vermivorous cone snails are ancestral to piscivorous species, our findings support the repurposing of defensive venom peptides in the evolution of piscivorous Conidae.- Published
- 2018
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