Abstract
A cone snail venom peptide, μOS-conotoxin GVIIJ from Conus geographus, has a unique posttranslational modification, S-cysteinylated cysteine, which makes possible formation of a covalent tether of peptide to its target Na channels at a distinct ligandbinding site. μOS-conotoxin GVIIJ is a 35-aa peptide, with 7 cysteine residues; six of the cysteines form 3 disulfide cross-links, and one (Cys24) is S-cysteinylated. Due to limited availability of native GVIIJ, we primarily used a synthetic analog whose Cys24 was S-glutathionylated (abbreviated GVIIJSSG). The peptide-channel complex is stabilized by a disulfide tether between Cys24 of the peptide and Cys910 of rat (r) NaV1.2. A mutant channel of rNaV1.2 lacking a cysteine near the pore loop of domain II (C910L), was >103-fold less sensitive to GVIIJSSG than was wild-type rNaV1.2. In contrast, although rNaV1.5 was >104-fold less sensitive to GVIIJSSG than NaV1.2, an rNaV1.5 mutant with a cysteine in the homologous location, rNaV1.5[L869C], was >103-fold more sensitive than wildtype rNaV1.5. The susceptibility of rNaV1.2 to GVIIJSSG was significantly altered by treating the channels with thiol-oxidizing or disulfide-reducing agents. Furthermore, coexpression of rNaVβ2 or rNaVβ4, but not that of rNaVβ1 or rNaVβ3, protected rNaV1.1 to -1.7 (excluding NaV1.5) against block by GVIIJSSG. Thus, GVIIJrelated peptides may serve as probes for both the redox state of extracellular cysteines and for assessing which NaVβ- and NaVa- subunits are present in native neurons.
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Gajewiak, J., Azam, L., Imperial, J., Walewska, A., Green, B. R., Bandyopadhyay, P. K., … Zhang, M. M. (2014). A disulfide tether stabilizes the block of sodium channels by the conotoxin μOS-GVIIJ. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 111(7), 2758–2763. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1324189111
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