Abstract

The post-translational modification of an L- to a D-amino acid has been documented in relatively few gene products, mostly in small peptides under 10 amino acids in length. In this report, we demonstrate that a 46-amino acid polypeptide toxin has one D-phenylalanine at position 44, and that the epimerization from an L-Phe to a D-Phe has a dramatic effect on the excitatory effects of the peptide. In one electrophysiological assay carried out, the D-Phe-containing peptide was extremely potent, whereas the unmodified polypeptide had no biological activity, demonstrating that the chirality of the post-translationally modified amino acid is functionally significant. The peptide toxin analyzed, r11a, belongs to the I-gene superfamily of conotoxins that has four disulfide cross-links. The D-Phe in r11a is at the third amino acid from the C terminus, the same relative position from the C-terminal end as the d-amino acid in omega-agatoxin TK from a spider, an unrelated peptide. Thus, although post-translational amino acid isomerization appears to have no strong specificity for the chemical nature of the amino acid side chain, the few peptides where this modification has been established suggest that there may be favored positions near the N or C terminus that are preferential sites for isomerization to a D-amino acid.

Highlights

  • The post-translational modification of an L- to a Damino acid has been documented in relatively few gene products, mostly in small peptides under 10 amino acids in length

  • We demonstrate that a 46-amino acid polypeptide toxin has one D-phenylalanine at position 44, and that the epimerization from an L-Phe to a D-Phe has a dramatic effect on the excitatory effects of the peptide

  • The posttranslational modification is important for optimal biological activity of the toxin

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Summary

A FUNCTIONALLY IMPORTANT D-AMINO ACID IN AN EXCITATORY PEPTIDE*

Of Biology, University of Utah, 257 South 1400 East, Salt Lake City, UT, 84112. We describe the presence of a D-amino acid in a member of a recently characterized group of conotoxins, the I-superfamily [18] This conotoxin, r11a, is only the third example found of a larger polypeptidic gene product, which has definitively been shown to have undergone this unusual posttranslational modification. We have synthesized both the Land the D-amino acid-containing isomers of conotoxin r11a, and demonstrate that the presence of the modified amino acid causes a marked change in biological activity

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Peptides with a D-amino acid at position 2 from the N terminus
Peptides with a D-amino acid at position 4 from the N terminus
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