Abstract

Venomous marine cone snails produce peptide toxins (conotoxins) that bind ion channels and receptors with high specificity and therefore are important pharmacological tools. Conotoxins contain conserved cysteine residues that form disulfide bonds that stabilize their structures. To gain structural insight into the large, yet poorly characterized conotoxin H-superfamily, we used NMR and CD spectroscopy along with MS-based analyses to investigate H-Vc7.2 from Conus victoriae, a peptide with a VI/VII cysteine framework. This framework has CysI-CysIV/CysII-CysV/CysIII-CysVI connectivities, which have invariably been associated with the inhibitor cystine knot (ICK) fold. However, the solution structure of recombinantly expressed and purified H-Vc7.2 revealed that although it displays the expected cysteine connectivities, H-Vc7.2 adopts a different fold consisting of two stacked β-hairpins with opposing β-strands connected by two parallel disulfide bonds, a structure homologous to the N-terminal region of the human granulin protein. Using structural comparisons, we subsequently identified several toxins and nontoxin proteins with this "mini-granulin" fold. These findings raise fundamental questions concerning sequence-structure relationships within peptides and proteins and the key determinants that specify a given fold.

Highlights

  • Venomous marine cone snails produce peptide toxins that bind ion channels and receptors with high specificity and are important pharmacological tools

  • The CyDisCo system is highly versatile in the sense that it works in any strain and in any media tested to date

  • We demonstrate that, despite having the disulfide pattern expected of a peptide with a VI/VII cysteine framework, NextH-Vc7.2 did not adopt an inhibitor cystine knot (ICK) fold

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Summary

Results

Previous analyses of the venom gland transcriptome of C. victoriae revealed the uncharacterized conotoxin H-superfamily, from which three transcripts were identified [10]. Disulfide-containing proteins can be expressed in the oxidized state in the cytosol of E. coli using the CyDisCo system [16, 17], which can produce highly complex disulfide-bonded proteins [16, 19]. In this system, the protein of interest is co-expressed with two redox enzymes, the mitochondrial oxidase Erv1p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae and human PDI.

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Discussion
Experimental procedures
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