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A new highly toxic protein isolated from the death cap Amanita phalloides is an l‐amino acid oxidase
Author(s) -
Stasyk Taras,
LutsikKordovsky Maxim,
Wernstedt Christer,
Antonyuk Volodymyr,
Klyuchivska Olga,
Souchelnytskyi Serhiy,
Hellman Ulf,
Stoika Rostyslav
Publication year - 2010
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.1742-4658.2010.07557.x
Subject(s) - biology , dna fragmentation , biochemistry , amino acid , programmed cell death , microbiology and biotechnology , apoptosis
A new highly cytotoxic protein, toxophallin, was recently isolated from the fruit body of the death cap Amanita phalloides mushroom [Stasyk et al. (2008) Studia Biologica 2, 21–32]. The physico‐chemical, chemical and biological characteristics of toxophallin differ distinctly from those of another death cap toxic protein, namely phallolysin. The interaction of toxophallin with target cells is not mediated by a specific cell surface receptor. It induces chromatin condensation, as well as DNA and nucleus fragmentation, which are typical for apoptosis. However, caspase III inhibitor [benzyloxycarbonyl‐Asp(OMe)‐fluoromethylketone] did not stop toxophallin‐induced DNA fragmentation. Thus, toxophallin uses a caspase‐independent pathway of apoptosis induction. In the present study, we applied a complementary approach based on a combination of proteomics and molecular biology tools for the protein identification of toxophallin. The primary structure of toxophallin was partially studied via direct sequencing of its tryptic peptides, followed by PCR‐based cloning of the corresponding cDNA. A subsequent bioinformatic search revealed a structural homology of toxophallin with the l‐amino acid oxidase of the Laccaria bicolor mushroom. This demonstrates the usefulness of our approach for the identification of proteins in organisms with unknown genomes. We also found a broad substrate specificity of toxophallin with respect to oxidizing selected amino acids. Ascorbic acid inhibited the cytotoxic effect of toxophallin, most likely as a result of scavenging hydrogen peroxide, which is the product of oxidase catalysis. Thus, in addition to highly toxic cyclopeptides and toxic lectin phallolysin, the death cap fruit body contains another cytotoxic protein in the form of an enzyme, namely l‐amino acid oxidase.

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