BgK is a K؉ channel-blocking toxin from the sea anemone Bunodosoma granulifera. It is a 37-residue protein that adopts a novel fold, as determined by NMR and modeling. An alanine-scanning-based analysis revealed the functional importance of five residues, which include a critical lysine and an aromatic residue separated by 6.6 ؎ 1.0 Å. The same diad is found in the three known homologous toxins from sea anemones. More strikingly, a similar functional diad is present in all K ؉ channel-blocking toxins from scorpions, although these toxins adopt a distinct scaffold. Moreover, the functional diads of potassium channel-blocking toxins from sea anemone and scorpions superimpose in the threedimensional structures. Therefore, toxins that have unrelated structures but similar functions possess conserved key functional residues, organized in an identical topology, suggesting a convergent functional evolution for these small proteins.Functional properties of proteins are frequently associated with a small number of important residues. For example, enzyme activities depend on a few residues that are essential for catalysis. Also, protein-protein recognition processes have been predicted (1) and recently demonstrated (2) to be energetically driven by a small proportion of the residues forming the contacting areas in protein-protein complexes, as identified by x-ray studies (3, 4). Among the proteins whose major functions require protein-protein interactions are animal toxins, which bind to various molecular targets, such as receptors or ion channels, using a small number of binding residues (5-8). As has been shown for enzymes (9), toxins with different architectures are capable of exerting similar functions (10). However, in contrast to enzymes, the molecular basis associated with the conservation of the function in structurally unrelated toxins remains unknown. In this paper, we show that two families of animal toxins with different folding patterns but a comparable capacity to bind to potassium channels include similar functional diads, composed of a critical lysine and an aromatic amino acid separated from each other by 6.6 Ϯ 1.0 Å. MATERIALS AND METHODS Synthesis of Toxin and Mutants-The amino acid sequence of BgK 1 was proposed a few years ago (11). However, chemical synthesis attempts, based on these data, systematically failed. The proposed amino acid sequence was therefore questioned, re-examined, and ultimately corrected.2 The revised amino acid sequence of BgK from Bunodosoma granulifera is: VCRDWFKETACRHAKSLGNCRTSQKYRANCAKTC-ELC. BgK and each alanine-substituted analog were synthesized by solid phase synthesis using an Applied Biosystems model 431A peptide synthesizer, starting from 0.1 mmol of Rink-resin (4-(2Ј,4Ј-dimethoxyphenylhydroxymethylphenoxy resin; 0.48 mmol/g). A 10-fold excess (1 mmol) of Fmoc (N-(9-fluorenyl)methoxycarbonyl)-protected amino acid was used and coupled in N-methylpyrrolidone in the presence of N,NЈ-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide/1-hydroxybenzotriazole. The following side chain protections wer...
Administration of selenium in humans has anticarcinogenic effects. However, the boundary between cancer-protecting and toxic levels of selenium is extremely narrow. The mechanisms of selenium toxicity need to be fully understood. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, selenite in the millimolar range is well tolerated by cells. Here we show that the lethal dose of selenite is reduced to the micromolar range by the presence of thiols in the growth medium. Glutathione and selenite spontaneously react to produce several selenium-containing compounds (selenodiglutathione, glutathioselenol, hydrogen selenide, and elemental selenium) as well as reactive oxygen species. We studied which compounds in the reaction pathway between glutathione and sodium selenite are responsible for this toxicity. Involvement of selenodiglutathione, elemental selenium, or reactive oxygen species could be ruled out. In contrast, extracellular formation of hydrogen selenide can fully explain the exacerbation of selenite toxicity by thiols. Indeed, direct production of hydrogen selenide with D-cysteine desulfhydrase induces high mortality. Selenium uptake by S. cerevisiae is considerably enhanced in the presence of external thiols, most likely through internalization of hydrogen selenide. Finally, we discuss the possibility that selenium exerts its toxicity through consumption of intracellular reduced glutathione, thus leading to severe oxidative stress.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, disruption of the YCF1 gene increases the sensitivity of cell growth to mercury. Transformation of the resulting ycf1 null mutant with a plasmid harbouring YCF1 under the control of the GAL promoter largely restores the wild-type resistance to the metal ion. The protective effect of Ycf1p against the toxicity of mercury is especially pronounced when yeast cells are grown in rich medium or in minimal medium supplemented with glutathione. Secretory vesicles from S. cerevisiae cells overproducing Ycf1p are shown to exhibit ATP-dependent transport of bis(glutathionato)-mercury. Moreover, using b-galactosidase as a reporter protein, a relationship between mercury addition and the activity of the YCF1 promoter can be shown. Altogether, these observations indicate a defence mechanism involving an induction of the expression of Ycf1p and transport by this protein of mercury-glutathione adducts into the vacuole. Finally, possible coparticipation in mercury tolerance of other ABC proteins sharing close homology with Ycf1p was investigated. Gene disruption experiments enable us to conclude that neither Bpt1p, Yor1p, Ybt1p nor YHL035p plays a major role in the detoxification of mercury.
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