1. Academic Validation
  2. Two tarantula peptides inhibit activation of multiple sodium channels

Two tarantula peptides inhibit activation of multiple sodium channels

  • Biochemistry. 2002 Dec 17;41(50):14734-47. doi: 10.1021/bi026546a.
Richard E Middleton 1 Vivien A Warren Richard L Kraus Jeremy C Hwang Chou J Liu Ge Dai Richard M Brochu Martin G Kohler Ying-Duo Gao Victor M Garsky Michael J Bogusky John T Mehl Charles J Cohen McHardy M Smith
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Ion Channels, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey, USA.
Abstract

Two Peptides, ProTx-I and ProTx-II, from the venom of the tarantula Thrixopelma pruriens, have been isolated and characterized. These Peptides were purified on the basis of their ability to reversibly inhibit the tetrodotoxin-resistant Na channel, Na(V) 1.8, and are shown to belong to the inhibitory cystine knot (ICK) family of peptide toxins interacting with voltage-gated ion channels. The family has several hallmarks: cystine bridge connectivity, mechanism of channel inhibition, and promiscuity across channels within and across channel families. The cystine bridge connectivity of ProTx-II is very similar to that of Other members of this family, i.e., C(2) to C(16), C(9) to C(21), and C(15) to C(25). These Peptides are the first high-affinity ligands for tetrodotoxin-resistant peripheral nerve Na(V) channels, but also inhibit Other Na(V) channels (IC(50)'s < 100 nM). ProTx-I and ProTx-II shift the voltage dependence of activation of Na(V) 1.5 to more positive voltages, similar to Other gating-modifier ICK family members. ProTx-I also shifts the voltage dependence of activation of CA(V) 3.1 (alpha(1G), T-type, IC(50) = 50 nM) without affecting the voltage dependence of inactivation. To enable further structural and functional studies, synthetic ProTx-II was made; it adopts the same structure and has the same functional properties as the native peptide. Synthetic ProTx-I was also made and exhibits the same potency as the native peptide. Synthetic ProTx-I, but not ProTx-II, also inhibits K(V) 2.1 channels with 10-fold less potency than its potency on Na(V) channels. These Peptides represent novel tools for exploring the gating mechanisms of several Na(V) and CA(V) channels.

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