“…Moreover, these peptides contain conserved amino acids at the N-and C-termini. Besides trypsin, Kunitz-type peptides from sea anemone H. crispa are also able to interact with other serine proteases (chymotrypsin, elastase, kallikrein) [19,39,53], modulate or block TRPV1 channel [22][23][24], revealing different kind of biological effects such as analgesic [22,[54][55][56], anti-inflammatory [9,41,54,57], antihistamine [41,58], as well as neuroprotective activity [59,60]. However, despite their high degree of homology with the known bifunctional peptides, like kalicludines, SHTXIII, APEKTx1, and ShPI-1 [16,18,19], none of them has shown potassium channels blocking activity.…”