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The unique pharmacology of the scorpion α‐like toxin Lqh3 is associated with its flexible C‐tail
Author(s) -
Karbat Izhar,
Kahn Roy,
Cohen Lior,
Ilan Nitza,
Gilles Nicolas,
Corzo Gerardo,
Froy Oren,
Gur Maya,
Albrecht Gudrun,
Heinemann Stefan H.,
Gordon Dalia,
Gurevitz Michael
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2007.05737.x
Subject(s) - hydrogen bond , stereochemistry , scorpion toxin , mutagenesis , chemistry , intramolecular force , toxin , residue (chemistry) , biophysics , scorpion , biochemistry , biology , molecule , mutant , venom , organic chemistry , gene
The affinity of scorpion α‐toxins for various voltage‐gated sodium channels (Na v s) differs considerably despite similar structures and activities. It has been proposed that key bioactive residues of the five‐residue‐turn (residues 8–12) and the C‐tail form the NC domain, whose topology is dictated by a cis or trans peptide‐bond conformation between residues 9 and 10, which correlates with the potency on insect or mammalian Na v s. We examined this hypothesis using Lqh3, an α‐like toxin from Leiurus quinquestriatus hebraeus that is highly active in insects and mammalian brain. Lqh3 exhibits slower association kinetics to Na v s compared with other α‐toxins and its binding to insect Na v s is pH‐dependent. Mutagenesis of Lqh3 revealed a bi‐partite bioactive surface, composed of the Core and NC domains, as found in other α‐toxins. Yet, substitutions at the five‐residue turn and stabilization of the 9–10 bond in the cis conformation did not affect the activity. However, substitution of hydrogen‐bond donors/acceptors at the NC domain reduced the pH‐dependency of toxin binding, while retaining its high potency at Drosophila Na v s expressed in Xenopus oocytes. Based on these results and the conformational flexibility and rearrangement of intramolecular hydrogen‐bonds at the NC domain, evident from the known solution structure, we suggest that acidic pH or specific mutations at the NC domain favor toxin conformations with high affinity for the receptor by stabilizing the bound toxin‐receptor complex. Moreover, the C‐tail flexibility may account for the slower association rates and suggests a novel mechanism of dynamic conformer selection during toxin binding, enabling α‐like toxins to affect a broad range of Na v s.