Zamora-Bustillos R, Rivera-Reyes R, Aguilar M B, Michel-Morfín E, Landa-Jaime V, Falcón A, Heimer E P
Laboratorio de Neurofarmacología Marina, Departamento de Neurobiología Celular y Molecular, Instituto de Neurobiología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Campus UNAM Juriquilla, Querétaro 76230, Mexico; Laboratorio de Genética Molecular, Instituto Tecnológico de Conkal, Conkal, Yucatán 97345, Mexico.
Laboratorio de Neurofarmacología Marina, Departamento de Neurobiología Celular y Molecular, Instituto de Neurobiología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Campus UNAM Juriquilla, Querétaro 76230, Mexico.
Peptides. 2014 Mar;53:22-9. doi: 10.1016/j.peptides.2014.01.018. Epub 2014 Jan 30.
Marine snails of the genus Conus (∼500 species) are tropical predators that produce venoms for capturing prey, defense and competitive interactions. These venoms contain 50-200 different peptides ("conotoxins") that generally comprise 7-40 amino acid residues (including 0-5 disulfide bridges), and that frequently contain diverse posttranslational modifications, some of which have been demonstrated to be important for folding, stability, and biological activity. Most conotoxins affect voltage- and ligand-gated ion channels, G protein-coupled receptors, and neurotransmitter transporters, generally with high affinity and specificity. Due to these features, several conotoxins are used as molecular tools, diagnostic agents, medicines, and models for drug design. Based on the signal sequence of their precursors, conotoxins have been classified into genetic superfamilies, whereas their molecular targets allow them to be classified into pharmacological families. The objective of this work was to identify and analyze partial cDNAs encoding precursors of conotoxins belonging to I superfamily from three vermivorous species of the Mexican Pacific coast: C. brunneus, C. nux and C. princeps. The precursors identified contain diverse numbers of amino acid residues (C. brunneus, 65 or 71; C. nux, 70; C. princeps, 72 or 73), and all include a highly conserved signal peptide, a C-terminal propeptide, and a mature toxin. All the latter have one of the typical Cys frameworks of the I-conotoxins (C-C-CC-CC-C-C). The prepropeptides belong to the I2-superfamily, and encode eight different hydrophilic and acidic mature toxins, rather similar among them, and some of which have similarity with I2-conotoxins targeting voltage- and voltage-and-calcium-gated potassium channels.
芋螺属(约500种)的海洋蜗牛是热带食肉动物,它们产生毒液用于捕获猎物、防御和竞争互动。这些毒液含有50 - 200种不同的肽(“芋螺毒素”),通常由7 - 40个氨基酸残基组成(包括0 - 5个二硫键),并且经常含有多种翻译后修饰,其中一些已被证明对折叠、稳定性和生物活性很重要。大多数芋螺毒素会影响电压门控和配体门控离子通道、G蛋白偶联受体以及神经递质转运体,通常具有高亲和力和特异性。由于这些特性,几种芋螺毒素被用作分子工具、诊断试剂、药物以及药物设计模型。根据其前体的信号序列,芋螺毒素已被分为遗传超家族,而它们的分子靶点则使其被分为药理学家族。这项工作的目的是鉴定和分析来自墨西哥太平洋沿岸三种食虫性物种(C. brunneus、C. nux和C. princeps)的I超家族芋螺毒素前体的部分cDNA。鉴定出的前体含有不同数量的氨基酸残基(C. brunneus为65或71个;C. nux为70个;C. princeps为72或73个),并且都包括一个高度保守的信号肽、一个C末端前肽和一个成熟毒素。所有后者都具有I型芋螺毒素的典型半胱氨酸框架之一(C - C - CC - CC - C - C)。前原肽属于I2超家族,编码八种不同的亲水性和酸性成熟毒素,它们彼此相当相似,其中一些与靶向电压门控和电压门控钙通道的I2型芋螺毒素相似。