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Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates

Snakes are equipped with their venomic armory to tackle different prey and predators in adverse natural world. The venomic composition of snakes is a mix of biologically active proteins and polypeptides. Among different components snake venom cytotoxins and short neurotoxin are non-enzymatic polypep...

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Autores principales: Panda, Subhamay, Chandra, Goutam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Biomedical Informatics 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3602882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23515844
http://dx.doi.org/10.6026/97320630009259
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author Panda, Subhamay
Chandra, Goutam
author_facet Panda, Subhamay
Chandra, Goutam
author_sort Panda, Subhamay
collection PubMed
description Snakes are equipped with their venomic armory to tackle different prey and predators in adverse natural world. The venomic composition of snakes is a mix of biologically active proteins and polypeptides. Among different components snake venom cytotoxins and short neurotoxin are non-enzymatic polypeptide candidates with in the venom. These two components structurally resembled to three-finger protein superfamily specific scaffold. Different non-toxin family members of three-finger protein superfamily are involved in different biological roles. In the present study we analyzed the snake venom cytotoxins, short neurotoxins and related non-toxin proteins of different chordates in terms of amino acid sequence level diversification profile, polarity profile of amino acid sequences, conserved pattern of amino acids and phylogenetic relationship of these toxin and nontoxin protein sequences. Sequence alignment analysis demonstrates the polarity specific molecular enrichment strategy for better system adaptivity. Occurrence of amino acid substitution is high in number in toxin sequences. In non-toxin body proteins there are less amino acid substitutions. With the help of conserved residues these proteins maintain the three-finger protein scaffold. Due to system specific adaptation toxin and non-toxin proteins exhibit a varied type of amino acid residue distribution in sequence stretch. Understanding of Natural invention scheme (recruitment of venom proteins from normal body proteins) may help us to develop futuristic engineered bio-molecules with remedial properties.
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spelling pubmed-36028822013-03-20 Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates Panda, Subhamay Chandra, Goutam Bioinformation Hypothesis Snakes are equipped with their venomic armory to tackle different prey and predators in adverse natural world. The venomic composition of snakes is a mix of biologically active proteins and polypeptides. Among different components snake venom cytotoxins and short neurotoxin are non-enzymatic polypeptide candidates with in the venom. These two components structurally resembled to three-finger protein superfamily specific scaffold. Different non-toxin family members of three-finger protein superfamily are involved in different biological roles. In the present study we analyzed the snake venom cytotoxins, short neurotoxins and related non-toxin proteins of different chordates in terms of amino acid sequence level diversification profile, polarity profile of amino acid sequences, conserved pattern of amino acids and phylogenetic relationship of these toxin and nontoxin protein sequences. Sequence alignment analysis demonstrates the polarity specific molecular enrichment strategy for better system adaptivity. Occurrence of amino acid substitution is high in number in toxin sequences. In non-toxin body proteins there are less amino acid substitutions. With the help of conserved residues these proteins maintain the three-finger protein scaffold. Due to system specific adaptation toxin and non-toxin proteins exhibit a varied type of amino acid residue distribution in sequence stretch. Understanding of Natural invention scheme (recruitment of venom proteins from normal body proteins) may help us to develop futuristic engineered bio-molecules with remedial properties. Biomedical Informatics 2013-03-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3602882/ /pubmed/23515844 http://dx.doi.org/10.6026/97320630009259 Text en © 2013 Biomedical Informatics This is an open-access article, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, for non-commercial purposes, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Panda, Subhamay
Chandra, Goutam
Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
title Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
title_full Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
title_fullStr Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
title_full_unstemmed Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
title_short Sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
title_sort sequence analysis and phylogenetic study of some toxin proteins of snakes and related non-toxin proteins of chordates
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3602882/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23515844
http://dx.doi.org/10.6026/97320630009259
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