4.7 Article

PHAB toxins: a unique family of predatory sea anemone toxins evolving via intra-gene concerted evolution defines a new peptide fold

期刊

CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES
卷 75, 期 24, 页码 4511-4524

出版社

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-018-2897-6

关键词

Neurotoxin; Ion channel; Mass spectrometry imaging; 3D structure; Concerted evolution; Extreme resolution mass spectrometry imaging; On-tissue reduction alkylation

资金

  1. Brazilian Government (Science Without Borders PhD scholarship)
  2. Australian Research Council [DE160101142, FT150100398, LP140100832]
  3. National Health & Medical Research Council [APP1044414]
  4. Wellcome Trust (UK)
  5. University of Queensland (Australia)
  6. Australian Research Council [LP140100832, FT150100398, DE160101142] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Sea anemone venoms have long been recognized as a rich source of peptides with interesting pharmacological and structural properties, but they still contain many uncharacterized bioactive compounds. Here we report the discovery, three-dimensional structure, activity, tissue localization, and putative function of a novel sea anemone peptide toxin that constitutes a new, sixth type of voltage-gated potassium channel (K-V) toxin from sea anemones. Comprised of just 17 residues, -actitoxin-Ate1a (Ate1a) is the shortest sea anemone toxin reported to date, and it adopts a novel three-dimensional structure that we have named the Proline-Hinged Asymmetric -hairpin (PHAB) fold. Mass spectrometry imaging and bioassays suggest that Ate1a serves a primarily predatory function by immobilising prey, and we show this is achieved through inhibition of Shaker-type K-V channels. Ate1a is encoded as a multi-domain precursor protein that yields multiple identical mature peptides, which likely evolved by multiple domain duplication events in an actinioidean ancestor. Despite this ancient evolutionary history, the PHAB-encoding gene family exhibits remarkable sequence conservation in the mature peptide domains. We demonstrate that this conservation is likely due to intra-gene concerted evolution, which has to our knowledge not previously been reported for toxin genes. We propose that the concerted evolution of toxin domains provides a hitherto unrecognised way to circumvent the effects of the costly evolutionary arms race considered to drive toxin gene evolution by ensuring efficient secretion of ecologically important predatory toxins.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.7
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据