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Of Seven New K + Channel Inhibitor Peptides of Centruroides bonito , α-KTx 2.24 Has a Picomolar Affinity for Kv1.2.

Authors :
Shakeel K
Olamendi-Portugal T
Naseem MU
Becerril B
Zamudio FZ
Delgado-Prudencio G
Possani LD
Panyi G
Source :
Toxins [Toxins (Basel)] 2023 Aug 15; Vol. 15 (8). Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Aug 15.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Seven new peptides denominated CboK1 to CboK7 were isolated from the venom of the Mexican scorpion Centruroides bonito and their primary structures were determined. The molecular weights ranged between 3760.4 Da and 4357.9 Da, containing 32 to 39 amino acid residues with three putative disulfide bridges. The comparison of amino acid sequences with known potassium scorpion toxins (KTx) and phylogenetic analysis revealed that CboK1 (α-KTx 10.5) and CboK2 (α-KTx 10.6) belong to the α-KTx 10.x subfamily, whereas CboK3 (α-KTx 2.22), CboK4 (α-KTx 2.23), CboK6 (α-KTx 2.21), and CboK7 (α-KTx 2.24) bear > 95% amino acid similarity with members of the α-KTx 2.x subfamily, and CboK5 is identical to Ce3 toxin (α-KTx 2.10). Electrophysiological assays demonstrated that except CboK1, all six other peptides blocked the Kv1.2 channel with Kd values in the picomolar range (24-763 pM) and inhibited the Kv1.3 channel with comparatively less potency (Kd values between 20-171 nM). CboK3 and CboK4 inhibited less than 10% and CboK7 inhibited about 42% of Kv1.1 currents at 100 nM concentration. Among all, CboK7 showed out-standing affinity for Kv1.2 (Kd = 24 pM), as well as high selectivity over Kv1.3 (850-fold) and Kv1.1 (~6000-fold). These characteristics of CboK7 may provide a framework for developing tools to treat Kv1.2-related channelopathies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2072-6651
Volume :
15
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Toxins
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37624263
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins15080506