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PHAB toxins: a unique family of predatory sea anemone toxins evolving via intra-gene concerted evolution defines a new peptide fold.

Authors :
Madio, Bruno
Peigneur, Steve
Chin, Yanni K. Y.
Hamilton, Brett R.
Henriques, Sónia Troeira
Smith, Jennifer J.
Cristofori-Armstrong, Ben
Dekan, Zoltan
Boughton, Berin A.
Alewood, Paul F.
Tytgat, Jan
King, Glenn F.
Undheim, Eivind A. B.
Source :
Cellular & Molecular Life Sciences; Dec2018, Vol. 75 Issue 24, p4511-4524, 14p, 2 Color Photographs, 3 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Sea anemone venoms have long been recognized as a rich source of peptides with interesting pharmacological and structural properties, but they still contain many uncharacterized bioactive compounds. Here we report the discovery, three-dimensional structure, activity, tissue localization, and putative function of a novel sea anemone peptide toxin that constitutes a new, sixth type of voltage-gated potassium channel (K<subscript>V</subscript>) toxin from sea anemones. Comprised of just 17 residues, κ-actitoxin-Ate1a (Ate1a) is the shortest sea anemone toxin reported to date, and it adopts a novel three-dimensional structure that we have named the Proline-Hinged Asymmetric β-hairpin (PHAB) fold. Mass spectrometry imaging and bioassays suggest that Ate1a serves a primarily predatory function by immobilising prey, and we show this is achieved through inhibition of Shaker-type K<subscript>V</subscript> channels. Ate1a is encoded as a multi-domain precursor protein that yields multiple identical mature peptides, which likely evolved by multiple domain duplication events in an actinioidean ancestor. Despite this ancient evolutionary history, the PHAB-encoding gene family exhibits remarkable sequence conservation in the mature peptide domains. We demonstrate that this conservation is likely due to intra-gene concerted evolution, which has to our knowledge not previously been reported for toxin genes. We propose that the concerted evolution of toxin domains provides a hitherto unrecognised way to circumvent the effects of the costly evolutionary arms race considered to drive toxin gene evolution by ensuring efficient secretion of ecologically important predatory toxins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1420682X
Volume :
75
Issue :
24
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cellular & Molecular Life Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132788898
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00018-018-2897-6