Swaminathan P, Hariharan M, Murali R, Singh C U
Department of Chemistry, Wyeth-Ayerst Research, Princeton, New Jersey 08543-8000, USA.
J Med Chem. 1996 May 24;39(11):2141-55. doi: 10.1021/jm950579p.
Three-dimensional structures of Dendrotoxin (DtX), Toxin-I (DpI), and Toxin-K (DpK) were determined using molecular mechanics and molecular dynamics techniques. The overall molecular conformation and protein folding of the three dendrotoxins are very similar to the published crystal structures of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) and alpha-DtX. Major secondary structural regions of the dendrotoxins are stable without much fluctuation during the dynamics simulation; the regions corresponding to the turns and bends (rich in lysines and arginines) exhibit more fluctuations. The conformational angles and the C alpha...C alpha' distances of the three disulfides (in each of the dendrotoxins) are different from each other. Comparative model building studies, involving the dendrotoxins and the proteinases, reveal that the key interactions (observed in BPTI-trypsin complex) needed for anti-protease activity are absent due to structural differences between the dendrotoxins and BPTI at the anti-protease loop; this explains the inability of the dendrotoxins to inhibit proteinases. The model also suggests that the solvent-exposed beta-turn region, rich in lysines (residues 26-28), might bind directly to the extracellular anionic sites of the receptors (K+ channels) by ionic interactions. The strikingly homologous cysteine distribution (Cys-x-x-x-Cys) in DtX, DpI, and DpK, at the C-terminus, induces the occurrence of a characteristic conformational motif, consisting of an alpha-helix (in an amphiphilic environment) stabilized by two disulfides, one involving a cysteine at the beta-strand, and the other at the N-terminus. This amphiphilic secondary structural element seems to provide the rigid frame work needed for exposing the proposed active site region of the dendrotoxins to the anionic sites of the K+ channel receptors.
利用分子力学和分子动力学技术确定了树眼镜蛇毒素(DtX)、毒素-I(DpI)和毒素-K(DpK)的三维结构。这三种树眼镜蛇毒素的整体分子构象和蛋白质折叠与已发表的牛胰蛋白酶抑制剂(BPTI)和α-DtX的晶体结构非常相似。在动力学模拟过程中,树眼镜蛇毒素的主要二级结构区域稳定,波动不大;对应于转角和弯曲处(富含赖氨酸和精氨酸)的区域波动较大。三种树眼镜蛇毒素中(每种中的)三个二硫键的构象角和Cα…Cα′距离彼此不同。涉及树眼镜蛇毒素和蛋白酶的比较模型构建研究表明,由于树眼镜蛇毒素和BPTI在抗蛋白酶环处的结构差异,抗蛋白酶活性所需的关键相互作用(在BPTI-胰蛋白酶复合物中观察到)不存在;这解释了树眼镜蛇毒素无法抑制蛋白酶的原因。该模型还表明,富含赖氨酸(残基26-28)的溶剂暴露β-转角区域可能通过离子相互作用直接与受体(钾通道)的细胞外阴离子位点结合。DtX、DpI和DpK在C端惊人地同源的半胱氨酸分布(Cys-x-x-x-Cys)诱导了一种特征性构象基序的出现,该基序由一个α-螺旋(在两亲环境中)组成,由两个二硫键稳定,一个涉及β-链上的半胱氨酸,另一个在N端。这种两亲性二级结构元件似乎为将树眼镜蛇毒素的拟活性位点区域暴露于钾通道受体的阴离子位点提供了所需的刚性框架。