“…These molecules, that have molecular weights close to 7000 Da, can bind to their target with high affinity, have no catalytic function and are functionally diversified. Numerous crystallographic analyses (Low et al, 1976;Tsernoglou & Petsko, 1976;Love & Stroud, 1986;Rees et al, 1987;Betzel et al, 1991;le Du, Marchot, Bougis & Fontecilla-Camps, 1992;Nickitenko, Michailov, Betzel & Wilson, 1993) as well as NMR studies (Labhardt, Hunziker-Kwik & Wtithrich, 1988;Steinmetz et al, 1988;Laplante et al, 1990;Yu, Lee, Chuang, Shei & Wang, 1990;Oswald et al, 1991 ;Brown & Wtithrich, 1992;Zinn-Justin et al, 1992;Goiovanov, Lomize, Arseniev, Utkin & Tsetlin, 1993;O'Connell, Bougis & Wi.ithrich, 1993) have shown that all these toxins are constituted of a dense core typically containing four disulfide bridges, and of three long loops (called I, II and III) emerging from the core, like the three central fingers of a hand. They all contain two ,8-sheets: a three-stranded sheet comprising loop II and one segment of loop II1, and a two-stranded one involving loop I.…”