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Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin

BACKGROUND: Among scorpion species, the Buthidae produce the most deadly and painful venoms. However, little is known regarding the venom components that cause pain and their mechanism of action. Using a paw-licking assay (Mus musculus), this study compared the pain-inducing capabilities of venoms f...

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Autores principales: Rowe, Ashlee H., Xiao, Yucheng, Scales, Joseph, Linse, Klaus D., Rowe, Matthew P., Cummins, Theodore R., Zakon, Harold H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3160894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21887265
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023520
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author Rowe, Ashlee H.
Xiao, Yucheng
Scales, Joseph
Linse, Klaus D.
Rowe, Matthew P.
Cummins, Theodore R.
Zakon, Harold H.
author_facet Rowe, Ashlee H.
Xiao, Yucheng
Scales, Joseph
Linse, Klaus D.
Rowe, Matthew P.
Cummins, Theodore R.
Zakon, Harold H.
author_sort Rowe, Ashlee H.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Among scorpion species, the Buthidae produce the most deadly and painful venoms. However, little is known regarding the venom components that cause pain and their mechanism of action. Using a paw-licking assay (Mus musculus), this study compared the pain-inducing capabilities of venoms from two species of New World scorpion (Centruroides vittatus, C. exilicauda) belonging to the neurotoxin-producing family Buthidae with one species of non-neurotoxin producing scorpion (Vaejovis spinigerus) in the family Vaejovidae. A pain-inducing α-toxin (CvIV4) was isolated from the venom of C. vittatus and tested on five Na(+) channel isoforms. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: C. vittatus and C. exilicauda venoms produced significantly more paw licking in Mus than V. spinigerus venom. CvIV4 produced paw licking in Mus equivalent to the effects of whole venom. CvIV4 slowed the fast inactivation of Na(v)1.7, a Na(+) channel expressed in peripheral pain-pathway neurons (nociceptors), but did not affect the Na(v)1.8-based sodium currents of these neurons. CvIV4 also slowed the fast inactivation of Na(v)1.2, Na(v)1.3 and Na(v)1.4. The effects of CvIV4 are similar to Old World α-toxins that target Na(v)1.7 (AahII, BmK MI, LqhIII, OD1), however the primary structure of CvIV4 is not similar to these toxins. Mutant Na(v)1.7 channels (D1586A and E1589Q, DIV S3–S4 linker) reduced but did not abolish the effects of CvIV4. CONCLUSIONS: This study: 1) agrees with anecdotal evidence suggesting that buthid venom is significantly more painful than non-neurotoxic venom; 2) demonstrates that New World buthids inflict painful stings via toxins that modulate Na(+) channels expressed in nociceptors; 3) reveals that Old and New World buthids employ similar mechanisms to produce pain. Old and New World α-toxins that target Na(v)1.7 have diverged in sequence, but the activity of these toxins is similar. Pain-inducing toxins may have evolved in a common ancestor. Alternatively, these toxins may be the product of convergent evolution.
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spelling pubmed-31608942011-09-01 Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin Rowe, Ashlee H. Xiao, Yucheng Scales, Joseph Linse, Klaus D. Rowe, Matthew P. Cummins, Theodore R. Zakon, Harold H. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Among scorpion species, the Buthidae produce the most deadly and painful venoms. However, little is known regarding the venom components that cause pain and their mechanism of action. Using a paw-licking assay (Mus musculus), this study compared the pain-inducing capabilities of venoms from two species of New World scorpion (Centruroides vittatus, C. exilicauda) belonging to the neurotoxin-producing family Buthidae with one species of non-neurotoxin producing scorpion (Vaejovis spinigerus) in the family Vaejovidae. A pain-inducing α-toxin (CvIV4) was isolated from the venom of C. vittatus and tested on five Na(+) channel isoforms. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: C. vittatus and C. exilicauda venoms produced significantly more paw licking in Mus than V. spinigerus venom. CvIV4 produced paw licking in Mus equivalent to the effects of whole venom. CvIV4 slowed the fast inactivation of Na(v)1.7, a Na(+) channel expressed in peripheral pain-pathway neurons (nociceptors), but did not affect the Na(v)1.8-based sodium currents of these neurons. CvIV4 also slowed the fast inactivation of Na(v)1.2, Na(v)1.3 and Na(v)1.4. The effects of CvIV4 are similar to Old World α-toxins that target Na(v)1.7 (AahII, BmK MI, LqhIII, OD1), however the primary structure of CvIV4 is not similar to these toxins. Mutant Na(v)1.7 channels (D1586A and E1589Q, DIV S3–S4 linker) reduced but did not abolish the effects of CvIV4. CONCLUSIONS: This study: 1) agrees with anecdotal evidence suggesting that buthid venom is significantly more painful than non-neurotoxic venom; 2) demonstrates that New World buthids inflict painful stings via toxins that modulate Na(+) channels expressed in nociceptors; 3) reveals that Old and New World buthids employ similar mechanisms to produce pain. Old and New World α-toxins that target Na(v)1.7 have diverged in sequence, but the activity of these toxins is similar. Pain-inducing toxins may have evolved in a common ancestor. Alternatively, these toxins may be the product of convergent evolution. Public Library of Science 2011-08-24 /pmc/articles/PMC3160894/ /pubmed/21887265 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023520 Text en Rowe et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rowe, Ashlee H.
Xiao, Yucheng
Scales, Joseph
Linse, Klaus D.
Rowe, Matthew P.
Cummins, Theodore R.
Zakon, Harold H.
Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin
title Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin
title_full Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin
title_fullStr Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin
title_full_unstemmed Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin
title_short Isolation and Characterization of CvIV4: A Pain Inducing α- Scorpion Toxin
title_sort isolation and characterization of cviv4: a pain inducing α- scorpion toxin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3160894/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21887265
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023520
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