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Solubilization and physical characterization of acceptors for dendrotoxin and .beta.-bungarotoxin from synaptic membranes of rat brain

59

Citations

37

References

1988

Year

Abstract

Dendrotoxin (DTX), an Mr 7000 convulsant polypeptide from the venom of Dendroaspis angusticeps, or its facilitatory homologues act through blockade of certain voltage-sensitive K+ currents in a variety of neurons. High-affinity acceptors for DTX have been demonstrated in synaptic plasma membranes of rat or chick brain, and a fraction of these avidly bind beta-bungarotoxin (beta-BuTX), a presynaptically active protein whose lighter B polypeptide is homologous to this toxin. Extraction of rat synaptic plasma membranes using Triton X-100 in K+-containing buffer yielded binding sites with KD values of approximately 0.5 and 0.7 nM for 125I-labeled DTX and beta-BuTX, respectively. The content of high-affinity sites obtained for beta-BuTX, including the contribution of a lower affinity component, approximates to the Bmax (approximately 1.3 pmol/mg of protein) obtained for the apparent single set of DTX acceptors. On solubilization, the pharmacological specificity of the acceptor for neurotoxic DTX congeners was retained. 125I-beta-BuTX binding (2.1 nM) was blocked efficaciously by DTX (IC50 = 1.6 nM) while the binding of 2.1 nM 125I-DTX was inhibited completely by beta-BuTX (IC50 = 25 nM); the lower potency of the latter could relate to the noncompetitive nature of the mutual competition and to the presence of high- and low-affinity sites for beta-BuTX. On gel filtration, or sedimentation analysis in H2O/sucrose and 2H2O/sucrose gradients, one peak of DTX binding activity was observed, and this was inhibitable by beta-BuTX. From the hydrodynamic properties of the acceptor/detergent/lipid complex (s20,w = 13.2 S; Stokes radius = 8.6 nm), a molecular weight of 405,000-465,000 was estimated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

References

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