Abstract
Colubrid snake venoms potentially represent a vast source of novel biological actives and structural motifs owing to their diverse phylogeny. The present study describes the identification of rufoxin, a neurotoxin from the venom of Rhamphiophis oxyrhynchus (Rufous beaked snake) which is a member of the African colubrid lineage, the psammophiines. Rufoxin (1 μM) displayed reversible post-synaptic neurotoxic activity as evidenced by significant inhibition of indirect twitches and responses to exogenous nicotinic agonists in the chick biventer cervicis nerve–muscle preparation. Rufoxin (0.1–1.0 μM) also caused a rightward parallel shift of cumulative concentration–response curves to carbachol (CCh; 0.6–80 μM) without a significant depression of the maximum response, suggestive of classical competitive antagonism at the skeletal muscle nicotinic receptor. Rufoxin lacks NH 2-terminal sequence homology to previously identified snake venom toxins. This work indicates a wider distribution of neurotoxins across the advanced snake superfamily than previously described.
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