1EIT image
Deposition Date 1995-12-14
Release Date 1996-04-03
Last Version Date 2024-10-23
Entry Detail
PDB ID:
1EIT
Keywords:
Title:
NMR STUDY OF MU-AGATOXIN
Biological Source:
Source Organism:
Method Details:
Experimental Method:
Conformers Submitted:
10
Macromolecular Entities
Polymer Type:polypeptide(L)
Molecule:MU-AGATOXIN-I
Chain IDs:A
Chain Length:37
Number of Molecules:1
Biological Source:Agelenopsis aperta
Ligand Molecules
Primary Citation
Three-dimensional structure analysis of mu-agatoxins: further evidence for common motifs among neurotoxins with diverse ion channel specificities.
Biochemistry 35 2836 2844 (1996)
PMID: 8608119 DOI: 10.1021/bi952605r

Abstact

We report the solution structure of mu-agatoxin-I (mu-Aga-I) and model structures of the closely related mu-agatoxin-IV (mu-Aga-IV) which were isolated from venom of the American funnel web spider, Agelenopsis aperta. These toxins, which modify the kinetics of neuronal voltage-activated sodium channels in insects, are C-terminally amidated peptides composed to 36 amino acids, including four internal disulfide bonds. The structure of mu-Aga-I was determined by NMR and distance geometry/molecular dynamics calculations. Structural calculations were carried out using 256 interresidue NOE-derived distance restraints and 25 angle restraints obtained from vicinal coupling constants. The peptide contains eight cysteines involved in disulfide bonds, the pairings of which were uncertain and had to be determined from preliminary structure calculations. The toxin has an average rmsd of 0.89 A for the backbone atoms among 38 converged conformers. The structure consists of a well-defined triple-stranded beta-sheet involving residues 7-9, 20-24, and 30-34 and four tight turns. A homologous peptide, mu-Aga-IV, exhibited two distinct and equally populated conformations in solution, which complicated spectral analysis. Analysis of sequential NOE's confirmed that the conformers arose from cis and trans peptide bonds involving a proline at position 15. Models were developed for both conformers based on the mu-Aga-I structure. Our structural data show that the mu-agatoxins, although specific modifiers of sodium channels, share common secondary and tertiary structural motifs with phylogenetically diverse peptide toxins targeting a variety of channel types. The mu-agatoxins add voltage-sensitive sodium channel activity to a growing list of neurotoxic effects elicited by peptide toxins which share the same global fold yet differ in their animal origin and ion channel selectivity.

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