Abstract

Scorpion venom is composed of a large repertoire of biologically active polypeptides. However, most of these peptides remain to be identified and characterized. In this paper, we report the identification and characterization of four novel disulfide-bridged venom peptides (named BmKBTx, BmKITx, BmKKx1 and BmKKx2, respectively) from the Chinese scorpion, Mesobuthus martensii (also named Buthus martensii Karsch). BmKBTx is composed of 58 amino acid residues and cross-linked by three disulfide bridges. The sequence of BmKBTx shows some similarities to that of the toxin, birtoxin, and its analogs. It is likely that BmKBTx is a β-toxin active on Na + channels, which is toxic to either insects or mammals. BmKITx is composed of 71 amino acid residues with four disulfide bridges. It is the longest venom peptide identified from M. martensii so far. BmKITx shows little sequence identity with scorpion α-toxins toxic to insects. It is likely that BmKITx is a new type of Na +-channel specific toxin active on both insects and mammals. BmKKx1 contains 38 amino acid residues cross-linked by three disulfide bridges and shows 84% sequence identity with BmTx3, an inhibitor of A-type K + channel and HERG currents. BmKKx1 has been classified as α-KTx-15.8. BmKKx2 is composed of 36 residues and stabilized by three disulfide bridges. BmKKx2 is a new member of the γ-K +-channel toxin subfamily (classified as γ-KTx 2.2). The venoms of scorpions thus continue to provide novel toxins with potential novel actions on targets.

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