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Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity

χ-Conotoxins are known for their ability to selectively inhibit norepinephrine transporters, an ability that makes them potential leads for treating various neurological disorders, including neuropathic pain. PnID, a peptide isolated from the venom of Conus pennaceus, shares high sequence homology w...

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Autores principales: Espiritu, Michael J., Taylor, Jonathan K., Sugai, Christopher K., Thapa, Parashar, Loening, Nikolaus M., Gusman, Emma, Baoanan, Zenaida G., Baumann, Michael H., Bingham, Jon-Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9964023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36827103
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md21020061
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author Espiritu, Michael J.
Taylor, Jonathan K.
Sugai, Christopher K.
Thapa, Parashar
Loening, Nikolaus M.
Gusman, Emma
Baoanan, Zenaida G.
Baumann, Michael H.
Bingham, Jon-Paul
author_facet Espiritu, Michael J.
Taylor, Jonathan K.
Sugai, Christopher K.
Thapa, Parashar
Loening, Nikolaus M.
Gusman, Emma
Baoanan, Zenaida G.
Baumann, Michael H.
Bingham, Jon-Paul
author_sort Espiritu, Michael J.
collection PubMed
description χ-Conotoxins are known for their ability to selectively inhibit norepinephrine transporters, an ability that makes them potential leads for treating various neurological disorders, including neuropathic pain. PnID, a peptide isolated from the venom of Conus pennaceus, shares high sequence homology with previously characterized χ-conotoxins. Whereas previously reported χ-conotoxins seem to only have a single native disulfide bonding pattern, PnID has three native isomers due to the formation of different disulfide bond patterns during its maturation in the venom duct. In this study, the disulfide connectivity and three-dimensional structure of these disulfide isomers were explored using regioselective synthesis, chromatographic coelution, and solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Of the native isomers, only the isomer with a ribbon disulfide configuration showed pharmacological activity similar to other χ-conotoxins. This isomer inhibited the rat norepinephrine transporter (IC(50) = 10 ± 2 µM) and has the most structural similarity to previously characterized χ-conotoxins. In contrast, the globular isoform of PnID showed more than ten times less activity against this transporter and the beaded isoform did not display any measurable biological activity. This study is the first report of the pharmacological and structural characterization of an χ-conotoxin from a species other than Conus marmoreus and is the first report of the existence of natively-formed conotoxin isomers.
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spelling pubmed-99640232023-02-26 Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity Espiritu, Michael J. Taylor, Jonathan K. Sugai, Christopher K. Thapa, Parashar Loening, Nikolaus M. Gusman, Emma Baoanan, Zenaida G. Baumann, Michael H. Bingham, Jon-Paul Mar Drugs Article χ-Conotoxins are known for their ability to selectively inhibit norepinephrine transporters, an ability that makes them potential leads for treating various neurological disorders, including neuropathic pain. PnID, a peptide isolated from the venom of Conus pennaceus, shares high sequence homology with previously characterized χ-conotoxins. Whereas previously reported χ-conotoxins seem to only have a single native disulfide bonding pattern, PnID has three native isomers due to the formation of different disulfide bond patterns during its maturation in the venom duct. In this study, the disulfide connectivity and three-dimensional structure of these disulfide isomers were explored using regioselective synthesis, chromatographic coelution, and solution-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Of the native isomers, only the isomer with a ribbon disulfide configuration showed pharmacological activity similar to other χ-conotoxins. This isomer inhibited the rat norepinephrine transporter (IC(50) = 10 ± 2 µM) and has the most structural similarity to previously characterized χ-conotoxins. In contrast, the globular isoform of PnID showed more than ten times less activity against this transporter and the beaded isoform did not display any measurable biological activity. This study is the first report of the pharmacological and structural characterization of an χ-conotoxin from a species other than Conus marmoreus and is the first report of the existence of natively-formed conotoxin isomers. MDPI 2023-01-19 /pmc/articles/PMC9964023/ /pubmed/36827103 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md21020061 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Espiritu, Michael J.
Taylor, Jonathan K.
Sugai, Christopher K.
Thapa, Parashar
Loening, Nikolaus M.
Gusman, Emma
Baoanan, Zenaida G.
Baumann, Michael H.
Bingham, Jon-Paul
Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity
title Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity
title_full Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity
title_fullStr Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity
title_short Characterization of the Native Disulfide Isomers of the Novel χ-Conotoxin PnID: Implications for Further Increasing Conotoxin Diversity
title_sort characterization of the native disulfide isomers of the novel χ-conotoxin pnid: implications for further increasing conotoxin diversity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9964023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36827103
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/md21020061
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