Ikitoxin

Ikitoxin is a neurotoxin from the venom of the South African Spitting scorpion (Parabuthus transvaalicus) that targets voltage-sensitive sodium channels. It causes unprovoked jumps in mice following intracerebroventricular injections.[1]

Ikitoxin
Category Ion channel toxin, Neurotoxin
Species Parabuthus transvaalicus[1]
Target voltage-gated sodium channel[1]
Symptoms Unprovoked jumps
Sequence length 58 AA [1]

Sources

South African spitting scorpion (Parabuthus transvaalicus)

Ikitoxin is one of the many components that can be isolated from the venom of the South African Spitting scorpion.[1] Other peptide toxins found in the venom include birtoxin, which is moderately toxic but very abundant, dortoxin, a lethal peptide, bestoxin, which causes writhing in mice, and altitoxin, a highly depressant peptide.[2]

Chemistry

Ikitoxin is a member of the birtoxin family of peptide neurotoxins that target sodium channels. Although identified as a long chain neurotoxin, which usually have 64-70 residues with four disulfide bridges, ikitoxin, like birtoxin, has a smaller size (58 residues) with only three disulfide bridges.[3] Ikitoxin differs from birtoxin by a single amino acid: from glycine to glutamic acid at position 23, consistent with an apparent mass difference of 72 Da between the two peptides.[1]

Mode of action

Both ikitoxin and birtoxin are beta toxins, which bind to and trap the voltage sensor of the channel at side 4. The binding of ikitoxin lowers the voltage threshold of sodium channels and produce a reduction in the current amplitude. As a result of the change in their activation properties, sodium channels will open at smaller depolarizations, resulting in increased excitability.[1][3]

Toxicity

Ikitoxin differs from birtoxin by only a single residue, but has a markedly reduced biological activity. In mice experiments, intracerebroventricular administration of ikitoxin induced unprovoked jumps. These jumps were observed at a concentration that was 1000-fold higher than in the case of birtoxin, and their onset was much slower. Another difference between these toxins is that birtoxin produced convulsions, tremors, increased ventilation and, subsequently, death.[1] Injection of up to 4 μg of ikitoxin in mice was not lethal. Ikitoxin seems to affect only mammals.

Treatment

Ikitoxin is one of many neurotoxic polypeptide components in the venom of the South African Spitting scorpion. It has a birtoxin-like structure. Antibodies against the N-terminus of the birtoxin protein structure can neutralize the venom of the South African spitting scorpion, and such antibodies may be useful clinically to treat envenomation.[4]

References

  1. Inceoglu, B.; Hayashida, Y.; Lango, J.; Ishida, A.; Hammock, B. (2002). "A single charged surface residue modifies the activity of ikitoxin, a beta-type Na+ channel toxin from Parabuthus transvaalicus". European Journal of Biochemistry. 269 (22): 5369–5376. doi:10.1046/j.1432-1033.2002.03171.x. PMID 12423335.
  2. Inceoglu, B; J Lango; I Pessah; B Hammock (2005). "Three structurally related, highly potent, peptides from the venom of possess divergent biological activity". Toxicon. 45 (6): 727–733. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2005.01.020. ISSN 0041-0101. PMID 15804521.
  3. Inceoglu, B.; Lango, J.; Wu, J.; Hawkins, P.; Southern, J.; Hammock, B.D. (2001). "Isolation and characterization of a novel type of neurotoxic peptide from the venom of the South African scorpion Parabuthus transvaalicus (Buthidae)". European Journal of Biochemistry. 268 (20): 5407–5413. doi:10.1046/j.0014-2956.2001.02479.x. PMID 11606203.
  4. Inceoglu, B; J Lango; A Rabinovich; P Whetstone; B Hammock (2006). "The neutralizing effect of a polyclonal antibody raised against the N-terminal eighteen-aminoacid residues of birtoxin towards the whole venom of Parabuthus transvaalicus". Toxicon. 47 (2): 144–149. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2005.08.018. ISSN 0041-0101. PMID 16356521.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.