Artículos de revistas
Novel wasp toxin discriminates between neuronal and cardiac sodium channels
Fecha
2001-06-01Registro en:
Molecular Pharmacology. Bethesda: Amer Soc Pharmacology Experimental Therapeutics, v. 59, n. 6, p. 1457-1463, 2001.
0026-895X
WOS:000169008300014
Autor
Hiroshima Univ
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Jichi Med Sch
Kumamoto Univ
Institución
Resumen
Pompilidotoxins (PMTXs), derived from the venom of solitary wasp has been known to facilitate synaptic transmission in the lobster neuromuscular junction, and a recent further study from rat trigeminal neurons revealed that the toxin slows Na+ channel inactivation without modifying activation process. Here we report that beta -PMTX modifies rat brain type II Na+ channel alpha -subunit (rBII) expressed in human embryonic kidney cells but fails to act on the rat heart alpha -subunit (rH1) at similar concentrations. We constructed a series of chimeric mutants of rBII and rH1 Na+ channels and compared modification of the steady-state Na+ currents by beta -PMTX. We found that a difference in a single amino acid between Glu-1616 in rBII and Gln-1615 in rH1 at the extracellular loop of D4S3-S4 is crucial for the action of beta -PMTX. PMTXs, which are small peptides with 13 amino acids, would be a potential tool for exploring a new functional moiety of Na+ channels.