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Multigene Family of Pore-Forming Toxins from Sea Anemone Heteractis crispa

28

Citations

73

References

2018

Year

Abstract

Sea anemones produce pore-forming toxins, actinoporins, which are interesting as tools for cytoplasmic membranes study, as well as being potential therapeutic agents for cancer therapy. This investigation is devoted to structural and functional study of the <i>Heteractis crispa</i> actinoporins diversity. Here, we described a multigene family consisting of 47 representatives expressed in the sea anemone tentacles as prepropeptide-coding transcripts. The phylogenetic analysis revealed that actinoporin clustering is consistent with the division of sea anemones into superfamilies and families. The transcriptomes of both <i>H. crispa</i> and <i>Heteractis magnifica</i> appear to contain a large repertoire of similar genes representing a rapid expansion of the actinoporin family due to gene duplication and sequence divergence. The presence of the most abundant specific group of actinoporins in <i>H. crispa</i> is the major difference between these species. The functional analysis of six recombinant actinoporins revealed that <i>H. crispa</i> actinoporin grouping was consistent with the different hemolytic activity of their representatives. According to molecular modeling data, we assume that the direction of the N-terminal dipole moment tightly reflects the actinoporins' ability to possess hemolytic activity.

References

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