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  4. Binding Of Kappa-Conotoxin-Pviia To Open And Closed Shaker K-Channels Are Differentially Affected By The Ionic Strength
 
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Binding Of Kappa-Conotoxin-Pviia To Open And Closed Shaker K-Channels Are Differentially Affected By The Ionic Strength

Journal
Marine Drugs
Date Issued
2020-10-26
Author(s)
Naranjo, David  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Ignacio Díaz-Franulic
DOI
10.3390/md18110533
WoS ID
WOS:000593289400001
Abstract
κ-Conotoxin-PVIIA (κ-PVIIA) is a potassium-channel blocking peptide from the venom of the fish-hunting snail, Conus purpurascens, which is essential for quick prey’s excitotoxic immobilization. Binding of one κ-PVIIA to Shaker K-channels occludes the K+-conduction pore without additional conformational effects. Because this 27-residue toxin is +4-charged at neutral pH, we asked if electrostatic interactions play a role in binding. With Voltage-Clamp electrophysiology, we tested how ionic strength (IS) affects κ-PVIIA blockade to Shaker. When IS varied from ~0.06 to ~0.16 M, the dissociation constant for open and closed channels increased by ~5- and ~16-fold, respectively. While the association rates decreased equally, by ~4-fold, in open and closed channels, the dissociation rates increased 4–5-fold in closed channels but was IS-insensitive in open channels. To explain this differential IS-dependency, we propose that the bound κ-PVIIA wobbles, so that in open channels the intracellular environment, via ion-conduction pore, buffers the imposed IS-changes in the toxin-channel interface. A Brønsted-Bjerrum analysis on the rates predicts that if, instead of fish, the snail preyed on organisms with seawater-like lymph ionic composition, a severely harmless toxin, with >100-fold diminished affinity, would result. Thus, considerations of the native ionic environment are essential for conotoxins evaluation as pharmacological leads.
Subjects

Chemistry, Medicinal

Pharmacology And Phar...

OCDE Subjects

Medical And Health Sc...

Quartile (Date Issued)
SQ
License
acceso abierto
Open Science Path
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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