Abstract

BackgroundAnimal neurotoxin peptides are valuable probes for investigating ion channel structure/function relationships and represent lead compounds for novel therapeutics and insecticides. However, misfolding and aggregation are common outcomes when toxins containing multiple disulfides are expressed in bacteria. MethodsThe β-scorpion peptide toxin Bj-xtrIT from Hottentotta judaica and four chaperone enzymes (DsbA, DsbC, SurA and FkpA) were co-secreted into the oxidizing environment of the Escherichia coli periplasm. Expressed Bj-xtrIT was purified and analyzed by HPLC and FPLC chromatography. Its thermostability was assessed using synchrotron radiation circular dichroism spectroscopy and its crystal structure was determined. ResultsWestern blot analysis showed that robust expression was only achieved when cells co-expressed the chaperones. The purified samples were homogenous and monodisperse and the protein was thermostable. The crystal structure of the recombinant toxin confirmed that it adopts the native disulfide connectivity and fold. ConclusionsThe chaperones enabled correct folding of the four-disulfide-bridged Bj-xtrIT toxin. There was no apparent sub-population of misfolded Bj-xtrIT, which attests to the effectiveness of this expression method. General significanceWe report the first example of a disulfide-linked scorpion toxin natively folded during bacterial expression. This method eliminates downstream processing steps such as oxidative refolding or cleavage of a fusion-carrier and therefore enables efficient production of insecticidal Bj-xtrIT. Periplasmic chaperone activity may produce native folding of other extensively disulfide-reticulated proteins including animal neurotoxins. This work is therefore relevant to venomics and studies of a wide range of channels and receptors.

Highlights

  • A diverse array of animals including scorpions, spiders, conus snails and sea anemones produce venom replete with small peptide neurotoxins to incapacitate prey or predators

  • In this study we show that the Bj-xtrIT β-scorpion toxin can be expressed in its natively-folded conformation by secretion of the polypeptide into the oxidizing environment of the E. coli periplasm [15]

  • Overexpression and purification of Bj-xtrIT-(His6) were achieved when a suite of chaperones was co-secreted into the periplasm

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Summary

Introduction

A diverse array of animals including scorpions, spiders, conus snails and sea anemones produce venom replete with small peptide neurotoxins to incapacitate prey or predators Most of these toxins modify the function of ion channels of the nervous, muscular or cardiovascular systems [1]. The toxins display variability in length, sequence, folds and molecular targets but share a common structural property in that in each case a network of disulfide bridges stabilizes their respective fold [2]. General significance: We report the first example of a disulfide-linked scorpion toxin natively folded during bacterial expression This method eliminates downstream processing steps such as oxidative refolding or cleavage of a fusion-carrier and enables efficient production of insecticidal Bj-xtrIT. This work is relevant to venomics and studies of a wide range of channels and receptors

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