Poly-Gly Region Regulates the Accessibility of Metal Binding Sites in Snake Venom Peptides

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Abstract

It is supposed that the presence of poly-His regions in close proximity to poly-Gly domains in snake venoms is related to their biological activity; poly-His/poly-Gly (pHpG) peptides inhibit the activity of metalloproteinases during venom storage via the chelation metal ions, necessary for their proper functioning. This work shows that only the histidyl residues from the N-terminal VDHDHDH motif (but not from the poly-His tag) were the primary Zn(II) binding sites and that the poly-Gly domain situated in the proximity of a central proline residue may play a regulatory role in venom gland protection. The proline induces a kink of the peptide, resulting in steric hindrance, which may modulate the accessibility of potential metal binding sites in the poly-His domain and may, in turn, be one of the regulators of Zn(II) accessibility in the venom gland and therefore a modulator of metalloproteinase activity during venom storage.

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APA

Wątły, J., Hecel, A., Wieczorek, R., Rowińska-Żyrek, M., & Kozłowski, H. (2022). Poly-Gly Region Regulates the Accessibility of Metal Binding Sites in Snake Venom Peptides. Inorganic Chemistry, 61(36), 14247–14251. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c02584

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