Sandbox Reserved 932
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Denmotoxin lacks the conserved arginine in loop II which is responsible for ACh receptor binding in most of the 3FTX family proteins. Instead this loop carries a negative charge mainly due to replacement of arginine to aspartate and presence of an additional glutamate. | Denmotoxin lacks the conserved arginine in loop II which is responsible for ACh receptor binding in most of the 3FTX family proteins. Instead this loop carries a negative charge mainly due to replacement of arginine to aspartate and presence of an additional glutamate. | ||
| - | Snakes and some other terrestrial animals such as mongoose have achieved resistance to denmotoxin by introducing a mutation in the aromatic AChR binding residues to asparagine (e.g. | + | Snakes and some other terrestrial animals such as mongoose have achieved resistance to denmotoxin by introducing a mutation in the aromatic AChR binding residues to asparagine (e.g. W→N) (see fig.). This allows introduction of N-glycolysation inside the binding pocket leading to spatial inhibition of denmotoxin binding, but still allowing the natural ligand ACh to interact with the receptor. |
===Conclusions=== | ===Conclusions=== | ||
Revision as of 08:11, 16 May 2014
| This Sandbox is Reserved from 01/04/2014, through 30/06/2014 for use in the course "510042. Protein structure, function and folding" taught by Prof Adrian Goldman, Tommi Kajander, Taru Meri, Konstantin Kogan and Juho Kellosalo at the University of Helsinki. This reservation includes Sandbox Reserved 923 through Sandbox Reserved 947. |
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B. Dendrophila monomeric toxin (Denmotoxin) is the primary protein of snake venom used by Boiga dendrophila. This colubrid snake lives in Southest Asian lowland rainforest and mangrove swamps using birds as its primary prey.
One of the most well characterized snake venom protein families is the Three-finger-toxins (3FTX). These proteins consist of three β-stranded finger-like polypeptide loops stabilized by four disulphide bridges on the surface of a globular core. In non-convential 3TFXs a fifth disulphide bridge can be present as is the case in Denmotoxin.
Denmotoxin binds specifically to bird muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptors preventing their normal function in signal transduction. This taxon specifity is reached by unique structural differences to other 3FTXs such as changes in the binding loop of the protein.
Denmotoxin
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Additional Information
References
Pawlak, J.; Mackessy, S.; Fry, B.; Bhatia, M.; Mourier, G.; Fruchart-Gaillard, C.; Servent, D.; Ménez, R.; Stura, E.; Ménez, A. 2006. Denmotoxin, a Three-finger Toxin from the Colubrid Snake Boiga dendrophila (Mangrove Catsnake) with Bird-specific Activity. The Journal of Biological Chemistry: 281: 29030-29041 doi: 10.1074/jbc.M605850200
