The National & Local Joint Engineering Laboratory of Animal Peptide Drug Development, College of Life Sciences, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, Hunan 410081, China; Peptide and small molecule drug R&D plateform, Furong Laboratory, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, 410081, Hunan, China.
The National & Local Joint Engineering Laboratory of Animal Peptide Drug Development, College of Life Sciences, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, Hunan 410081, China; Peptide and small molecule drug R&D plateform, Furong Laboratory, Hunan Normal University, Changsha, 410081, Hunan, China.
Int J Biol Macromol. 2022 Nov 30;221:691-702. doi: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2022.09.079. Epub 2022 Sep 10.
Cysteine-rich secretory proteins (CRISPs), antigen 5 (Ag5), and pathogenesis-related (PR-1) superfamily proteins (CAP superfamily proteins) are found in diverse species across the bacterial, fungal, plant, mammalian, and venomous animal kingdoms. Notably, CAP proteins are found in a remarkable range of species across the venomous animal kingdom and are present almost ubiquitously in venoms, even when venoms are produced in very small quantities. Meanwhile, in comparison to mammals, venomous animals are underappreciated and easy to ignore. Overwhelming evidence suggests that CAP proteins derived from venomous animals exhibit diverse activities, including ion channel, inflammatory, proteolysis, and immune regulatory activities. To understand the potential biological functions of CAP proteins in venom more effectively, we need to examine the significance of the evolution of venomous animals in the animal kingdom, for their survival. In this article, we will review the current status of research on CAP proteins in venomous animals, including their isolation, characterization, known biological activities, and sequence alignments. We will also discuss the rapid evolution of CAP proteins with varied subtypes in venomous animals. A treasure trove of information can be obtained by studying the CAP proteins in venomous animals; hence, it is necessary to explore these proteins further.
富含半胱氨酸的分泌蛋白(CRISPs)、抗原 5(Ag5)和与发病机制相关的(PR-1)超家族蛋白(CAP 超家族蛋白)存在于细菌、真菌、植物、哺乳动物和有毒动物王国的各种物种中。值得注意的是,CAP 蛋白在有毒动物王国的许多物种中都有发现,并且几乎普遍存在于毒液中,即使毒液的产量非常小。同时,与哺乳动物相比,有毒动物被低估且容易被忽视。大量证据表明,源自有毒动物的 CAP 蛋白表现出多种活性,包括离子通道、炎症、蛋白水解和免疫调节活性。为了更有效地了解 CAP 蛋白在毒液中的潜在生物学功能,我们需要研究毒液中有毒动物在动物王国中的生存进化的重要性。在本文中,我们将回顾毒液中 CAP 蛋白的研究现状,包括它们的分离、表征、已知的生物学活性和序列比对。我们还将讨论有毒动物中 CAP 蛋白的快速进化和多样化的亚型。通过研究毒液中的 CAP 蛋白,可以获得大量信息,因此有必要进一步探索这些蛋白。