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Purification, Characterization, and Amino Acid Sequence Determination of Acanthins, Potent Inhibitors of Platelet Aggregation fromAcanthophis antarcticus(Common Death Adder) Venom

Authors :
R. Manjunatha Kini
Geraldine Chow
Sivan Subburaju
Source :
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics. 354:232-238
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1998.

Abstract

Venom of Acanthophis antarcticus, a common death adder, exhibits potent antiplatelet effects. By a combination of gel-filtration, cation-exchange, and reversed-phase chromatographic methods, two inhibitors of platelet aggregation, named acanthin I and II, were purified to homogeneity as assessed by capillary electrophoresis and electrospray mass spectrometry. These isoforms exhibit the most potent antiplatelet activity known thus far, with IC50 values of 7 nM for acanthin I and 4 nM for acanthin II in human whole blood when collagen was used as an agonist, whereas with ADP the IC50 values were 10 and 12 nM, respectively. Acanthin I and II are basic proteins with pIs of 10.2 +/- 0.1 and 10.4 +/- 0.1 and molecular weights of 12,844.58 +/- 0.61 and 12,895.63 +/- 0.48, respectively, as determined by electrospray mass spectrometry. They exhibit phospholipase enzyme activity, and acanthin I and II hydrolyzed 51. 57 +/- 1.30 and 46.85 +/- 2.90 micromol of phosphatidylcholine/min/mg, respectively. The complete amino acid sequences of acanthin I and II showed that they have a high homology with each other and with other elapids' phospholipase A2 neurotoxin, especially pseudexin A.

Details

ISSN :
00039861
Volume :
354
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f81fe444817cc2c0657dec64eee5130