A membrane-access mechanism of ion channel inhibition by voltage sensor toxins from spider venom.
Venomous animals produce small protein toxins that inhibit ion channels with high affinity. In several well-studied cases the inhibitory proteins are water-soluble and bind at a channel's aqueous-exposed extracellular surface. Here we show that a voltage-sensor toxin (VSTX1) from the Chilean Rose Tarantula (Grammostola spatulata) reaches its target by partitioning into the lipid membrane. Lipid membrane partitioning serves two purposes: to localize the toxin in the membrane where the voltage sensor resides and to exploit the free energy of partitioning to achieve apparent high-affinity inhibition. VSTX1, small hydrophobic poisons and anaesthetic molecules reveal a common theme of voltage sensor inhibition through lipid membrane access. The apparent requirement for such access is consistent with the recent proposal that the sensor in voltage-dependent K+ channels is located at the membrane-protein interface.
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- Tryptophan
- Spider Venoms
- Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated
- Peptides
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Models, Biological
- Membrane Lipids
- Ion Channel Gating
- General Science & Technology
- Fluorescence
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Tryptophan
- Spider Venoms
- Potassium Channels, Voltage-Gated
- Peptides
- Molecular Sequence Data
- Models, Biological
- Membrane Lipids
- Ion Channel Gating
- General Science & Technology
- Fluorescence