4.6 Review

Conus Venom Peptide Pharmacology

Journal

PHARMACOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 259-298

Publisher

AMER SOC PHARMACOLOGY EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS
DOI: 10.1124/pr.111.005322

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC)
  2. NHMRC
  3. University of Queensland

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Conopeptides are a diverse group of recently evolved venom peptides used for prey capture and/or defense. Each species of cone snails produces in excess of 1000 conopeptides, with those pharmacologically characterized (similar to 0.1%) targeting a diverse range of membrane proteins typically with high potency and specificity. The majority of conopeptides inhibit voltage- or ligand-gated ion channels, providing valuable research tools for the dissection of the role played by specific ion channels in excitable cells. It is noteworthy that many of these targets are found to be expressed in pain pathways, with several conopeptides having entered the clinic as potential treatments for pain [e. g., pyroglutamate1-MrIA (Xen2174)] and one now marketed for intrathecal treatment of severe pain [ziconotide (Prialt)]. This review discusses the diversity, pharmacology, structure-activity relationships, and therapeutic potential of cone snail venom peptide families acting at voltage-gated ion channels (omega-, mu-, mu O-, delta-, tau-, and kappa-conotoxins), ligand-gated ion channels (alpha-conotoxins, sigma-conotoxin, ikot-ikot, and conantokins), G-protein-coupled receptors (rho-conopeptides, conopressins, and contulakins), and neurotransmitter transporters (chi-conopeptides), with expanded discussion on the clinical potential of sodium and calcium channel inhibitors and alpha-conotoxins. Expanding the discovery of new bioactives using proteomic/transcriptomic approaches combined with high-throughput platforms and better defining conopeptide structure-activity relationships using relevant membrane protein crystal structures are expected to grow the already significant impact conopeptides have had as both research probes and leads to new therapies.

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