4.7 Article

MT9, a natural peptide from black mamba venom antagonizes the muscarinic type 2 receptor and reverses the M2R-agonist-induced relaxation in rat and human arteries

Journal

BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY
Volume 150, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopha.2022.113094

Keywords

Snake venom; M2 muscarinic receptor; Bioactive peptide mass spectrometry; Peptide sequencing, Drug screening Peptide synthesis; Peptide folding; Arterial pressure

Funding

  1. French Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-11-LABX-0015]
  2. Region Pays de la Loire [2016-11092/11093]
  3. European FEDER [2017/FEDER/PL0014592]

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This study identified a selective M2R ligand, MT9, from mamba snake venom and investigated its contribution to arterial contractions. MT9 exhibited a 100 times stronger affinity for M2R compared to other muscarinic receptors, and antagonized the M2R/Gi pathways in cell tests. It also acted as a non-competitive antagonist with low nM potency against acetylcholine or arecaine in isolated arteries.
All five muscarinic receptors have important physiological roles. The endothelial M2 and M3 subtypes regulate arterial tone through direct coupling to Gq or Gi/o proteins. Yet, we lack selective pharmacological drugs to assess the respective contribution of muscarinic receptors to a given function. We used mamba snake venoms to identify a selective M2R ligand to investigate its contribution to arterial contractions. Using a bio-guided screening binding assay, we isolated MT9 from the black mamba venom, a three-finger toxin active on the M2R subtype. After sequencing and chemical synthesis of MT9, we characterized its structure by X-ray diffraction and determined its pharmacological characteristics by binding assays, functional tests, and ex vivo experiments on rat and human arteries. Although MT9 belongs to the three-finger fold toxins family, it is phylogenetically apart from the previously discovered muscarinic toxins, suggesting that two groups of peptides evolved independently and in a convergent way to target muscarinic receptors. The affinity of MT9 for the M2R is 100 times stronger than that for the four other muscarinic receptors. It also antagonizes the M2R/Gi pathways in cell-based assays. MT9 acts as a non-competitive antagonist against acetylcholine or arecaine, with low nM potency, for the activation of isolated rat mesenteric arteries. These results were confirmed on human internal mammary arteries. In conclusion, MT9 is the first fully characterized M2R-specific natural toxin. It should provide a tool for further understanding of the effect of M2R in various arteries and may position itself as a new drug candidate in cardiovascular diseases

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