Abstract

Brevetoxins are produced by dinoflagellates such as Karenia brevis in warm-water red tides and cause neurotoxic shellfish poisoning. They bind to voltage-gated sodium channels at neurotoxin receptor 5, making the channels more active by shifting the voltage-dependence of activation to more negative potentials and by slowing the inactivation process. Previous work using photoaffinity labeling identified binding to the IS6 and IVS5 transmembrane segments of the channel α subunit. We used alanine-scanning mutagenesis to identify molecular determinants for brevetoxin binding in these regions as well as adjacent regions IVS5-SS1 and IVS6. Most of the mutant channels containing single alanine substitutions expressed functional protein in tsA-201 cells and bound to the radioligand [42-3H]-PbTx3. Binding affinity for the great majority of mutant channels was indistinguishable from wild type. However, transmembrane segments IS6, IVS5 and IVS6 each contained 2 to 4 amino acid positions where alanine substitution resulted in a 2–3-fold reduction in brevetoxin affinity, and additional mutations caused a similar increase in brevetoxin affinity. These findings are consistent with a model in which brevetoxin binds to a protein cleft comprising transmembrane segments IS6, IVS5 and IVS6 and makes multiple distributed interactions with these α helices. Determination of brevetoxin affinity for Nav1.2, Nav1.4 and Nav1.5 channels showed that Nav1.5 channels had a characteristic 5-fold reduction in affinity for brevetoxin relative to the other channel isoforms, suggesting the interaction with sodium channels is specific despite the distributed binding determinants.

Highlights

  • After brevetoxins A (PbTx1) and B (PbTx2) were isolated from the dinoflagellate Karenia brevis by Lin et al [1] and Shimizu et al [2] a series of cognates were purified, named PbTx-1 to 9 after the original species designation of the dinoflagellates [3]

  • Ingestion of shellfish exposed to the bloom results in neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP) with gastrointestinal and neurological sequelae including peripheral and central nervous system

  • Those biological effects were attributed to the action of PbTx-B1 to are thought to be metabolic products of brevetoxin B in the shellfish body

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Summary

Introduction

After brevetoxins A (PbTx1) and B (PbTx2) were isolated from the dinoflagellate Karenia brevis (formerly named Ptycodiscus brevis or Gymnodinium breve) by Lin et al [1] and Shimizu et al [2] a series of cognates were purified, named PbTx-1 to 9 after the original species designation of the dinoflagellates [3]. Blooms of this harmful dinoflagellate in the Gulf of Mexico in 1996 and New. Zealand in 1992 to 1993 caused massive kills of fish and mammals. Those biological effects were attributed to the action of PbTx-B1 to are thought to be metabolic products of brevetoxin B in the shellfish body

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