A New Polypeptide Toxin from the Nematocyst Venom of an Okinawan Sea Anemone Phyllodiscus semoni (Japanese name “unbachi-isoginchaku”)

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Abstract

The venomous sea anemone Phyllodiscus semoni causes cases of severe stinging. We isolated Phyllodiscus semoni toxin 20A (PsTX-20A), a hemolytic and lethal polypeptide (20 kDa), from the nematocyst venom of this species for the first time. Furthermore, we sequenced the cDNA encoding PsTX-20A. The deduced amino acid sequence of PsTX-20A showed that this toxin was a new member of the actinoporin family, which consists of several cytolytic polypeptides originating from sea anemones. PsTX-20A showed lethal toxicity to the shrimp Palaemon paucidens when administered via intraperitoneal injection (LD50, 50 μg/kg) and hemolytic activity toward 0.8% sheep red blood cells (ED50, 80 ng/ml). © 2002 by Japan Society for Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Agrochemistry.

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Nagai, H., Oshiro, N., Takuwa-Kuroda, K., Iwanaga, S., Nozaki, M., & Nakajima, T. (2002). A New Polypeptide Toxin from the Nematocyst Venom of an Okinawan Sea Anemone Phyllodiscus semoni (Japanese name “unbachi-isoginchaku”). Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 66(12), 2621–2625. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.66.2621

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