Solution structure of potassium channel-inhibiting scorpion toxin Lq2

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Abstract

Lq2 is a unique scorpion toxin. Acting from the extracellular side, Lq2 blocks the ion conduction pore in not only the voltage- and Ca2+-activated channels, but also the inward-rectifier K+ channels. This finding argues that the three-dimensional structures of the pores in these K+ channels are similar. However, the amino acid sequences that form the external part of the pore are minimally conserved among the various classes of K+ channels. Because Lq2 can bind to all the three classes of K+ channels, we can use Lq2 as a structural probe to examine how the non-conserved pore-forming sequences are arranged in space to form similar pore structures. In the present study, we determined the three-dimensional structure of Lq2 using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) techniques. Lq2 consists of an α-helix (residues S10 to L20) and a β-sheet, connected by an αβ3 loop (residues N22 to N24). The β- sheet has two well-defined anti-parallel strands (residues G26 to M29 and residues K32 to C35), which are connected by a type I' β-turn centered between residues N30 and K31. The N-terminal segment (residues Z1 to T8) appears to form a quasi-third strand of the β-sheet.

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Renisio, J. G., Lu, Z., Blanc, E., Jin, W., Lewis, J. H., Bornet, O., & Darbon, H. (1999). Solution structure of potassium channel-inhibiting scorpion toxin Lq2. Proteins: Structure, Function and Genetics, 34(4), 417–426. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1097-0134(19990301)34:4<417::AID-PROT1>3.0.CO;2-R

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