Publication | Open Access
Conus geographus toxins that discriminate between neuronal and muscle sodium channels.
398
Citations
42
References
1985
Year
ToxinologySynaptic TransmissionMuscle Sodium ChannelsNeurotransmissionChemical BiologyConus GeographusNeuromuscular JunctionBioanalysisVenomicsNeurologyPlanar Lipid BilayersMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryIon Channels22-Amino Acid PeptidesNervous SystemNeuromuscular PhysiologyMajor PeptideBiologyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyNatural SciencesPhysiologyNeuroscienceMedicineNeuromusculoskeletal Disorder
The study characterizes mu‑conotoxins, 22‑residue peptides from *Conus geographus*, as probes for voltage‑dependent sodium channels in excitable tissues. The authors purified seven mu‑conotoxin homologs, determined their sequences, and used the major peptide GIIIA in electrophysiological and planar lipid bilayer assays to characterize its voltage‑dependent, single‑site reversible blockade of rat muscle sodium channels. GIIIA selectively blocks muscle sodium channels with a 100 nM equilibrium KD that decreases e‑fold per 34 mV hyperpolarization, exhibiting voltage‑dependent, single‑site reversible binding similar to TTX and saxitoxin, and its tissue‑specific kinetics indicate mu‑conotoxins can distinguish sodium channel subtypes.
We describe the properties of a family of 22-amino acid peptides, the mu-conotoxins, which are useful probes for investigating voltage-dependent sodium channels of excitable tissues. The mu-conotoxins are present in the venom of the piscivorous marine snail, Conus geographus L. We have purified seven homologs of the mu-conotoxin set and determined their amino acid sequences, as follows, where Hyp = trans-4-hydroxyproline. GIIIA R.D.C.C.T.Hyp.Hyp.K.K.C.K.D.R.Q.C.K.Hyp.Q.R.C.C.A-NH2 [Pro6]GIIIA R.D.C.C. C.K.Hyp.M.K.C.C.A-NH2 [Pro7]GIIIB R.D.C.C.T.Hyp.P.R.K.C.K.D.R.R.C.K.Hyp.M.K.C.C.A-NH2 GIIIC R.D.C.C.T.Hyp.Hyp.K.K.C.K.D.R.R.C.K.Hyp.L.K.C.C.A-NH2. Using the major peptide (GIIIA) in electrophysiological studies on nerve-muscle preparations and in single channel studies using planar lipid bilayers, we have established that the toxin blocks muscle sodium channels, while having no discernible effect on nerve or brain sodium channels. In bilayers the blocking kinetics of GIIIA were derived by statistical analysis of discrete transitions between blocked and unblocked states of batrachotoxin-activated sodium channels from rat muscle. The kinetics conform to a single-site, reversible binding equilibrium with a voltage-dependent binding constant. The measured value of the equilibrium KD for GIIIA is 100 nM at OmV, decreasing e-fold/34 mV of hyperpolarization. This voltage dependence of blocking is similar to that of tetrodotoxin and saxitoxin as measured by the same technique. The tissue specificity and kinetic characteristics suggest that the mu-conotoxins may serve as useful ligands to distinguish sodium channel subtypes in different tissues.
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