期刊文献+

A perspective on toxicology of Conus venom peptides

A perspective on toxicology of Conus venom peptides
下载PDF
导出
摘要 The evolutionarily unique and ecologically diverse family Conidae presents fundamental opportunities for marine pharmacology research and drug discovery.The focus of this investigation is to summarize the worldwide distribution of Conus and their species diversity with special reference to the Indian coast.In addition,this study will contribute to understanding the structural properties of conotoxin and therapeutic application of Conus venom peptides.Cone snails can inject a mix of various conotoxins and these venoms are their major weapon for prey capture,and may also have other biological purposes,and some of these conotoxins fatal to humans.Conns venoms contain a remarkable diversity of pharmacologically active small peptides;their targets are an iron channel and receptors in the neuromuscular system.Interspecific divergence is pronounced in venom peptide genes,which is generally attributed to their species specific biotic interactions.There is a notable interspecific divergence observed in venom peptide genes,which can be justified as of biotic interactions that stipulate species peculiar habitat and ecology of cone snails.There are several conopeptides used in clinical trials and one peptide(Ziconotide) has received FDA approval for treatment of pain.This perspective provides a comprehensive overview of the distribution of cone shells and focus on the molecular approach in documenting their taxonomy and diversity with special reference to geographic distribution of Indian cone snails,structure and properties of conopeptide and their pharmacological targets and future directions. The evolutionarily unique and ecologically diverse family Conidae presents fundamental opportunities for marine pharmacology research and drug discovery.The focus of this investigation is to summarize the worldwide distribution of Conus and their species diversity with special reference to the Indian coast.In addition,this study will contribute to understanding the structural properties of conotoxin and therapeutic application of Conus venom peptides.Cone snails can inject a mix of various conotoxins and these venoms are their major weapon for prey capture,and may also have other biological purposes,and some of these conotoxins fatal to humans.Conns venoms contain a remarkable diversity of pharmacologically active small peptides;their targets are an iron channel and receptors in the neuromuscular system.Interspecific divergence is pronounced in venom peptide genes,which is generally attributed to their species specific biotic interactions.There is a notable interspecific divergence observed in venom peptide genes,which can be justified as of biotic interactions that stipulate species peculiar habitat and ecology of cone snails.There are several conopeptides used in clinical trials and one peptide(Ziconotide) has received FDA approval for treatment of pain.This perspective provides a comprehensive overview of the distribution of cone shells and focus on the molecular approach in documenting their taxonomy and diversity with special reference to geographic distribution of Indian cone snails,structure and properties of conopeptide and their pharmacological targets and future directions.
出处 《Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Medicine》 SCIE CAS 2015年第5期337-351,共15页 亚太热带医药杂志(英文版)
关键词 Distribution CONUS CONOTOXIN Peptide TOXICOLOGY PHARMACOLOGY Distribution Conus Conotoxin Peptide Toxicology Pharmacology
  • 相关文献

参考文献21

  • 1Cheng-Zhong WANG and Cheng-Wu CHIInstitute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institute of Biological Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China,Institute of Neuroscience, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China,Institute of Protein Research, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China.Conus Peptides-A Rich Pharmaceutical Treasure[J].Acta Biochimica et Biophysica Sinica,2004,36(11):713-723. 被引量:8
  • 2Clifford A. Kapono,Parashar Thapa,Chino C. Cabalteja,Daniela Guendisch,Abby C. Collier,Jon-Paul Bingham.Conotoxin truncation as a post-translational modification to increase the pharmacological diversity within the milked venom of Conus magus[J]. Toxicon . 2013
  • 3Lo?c Quinton,Denis Servent,Emmanuelle Girard,Jordi Molgó,Jean-Pierre Caer,Christian Malosse,El Ali Haidar,Alain Lecoq,Nicolas Gilles,Julia Chamot-Rooke.Identification and functional characterization of a novel α-conotoxin (EIIA) from Conus ermineus[J]. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry . 2013 (15)
  • 4Carolina M?ller,Nicole Vanderweit,José Bubis,Frank Marí.Comparative analysis of proteases in the injected and dissected venom of cone snail species[J]. Toxicon . 2013
  • 5Manuel B. Aguilar,Alejandro Zugasti-Cruz,Andrés Falcón,César V.F. Batista,Baldomero M. Olivera,Edgar P. Heimer de la Cotera.A novel arrangement of Cys residues in a paralytic peptide of Conus cancellatus (jr. syn.: Conus austini ), a worm-hunting snail from the Gulf of Mexico[J]. Peptides . 2013
  • 6Steve Peigneur,Annelies Van Der Haegen,Carolina M?ller,Etienne Waelkens,Elia Diego-García,Frank Marí,Ryno Naudé,Jan Tytgat.Unraveling the peptidome of the South African cone snails Conus pictus and Conus natalis[J]. Peptides . 2013
  • 7Henry G. Hocking,Gerrit J. Gerwig,Sébastien Dutertre,Aude Violette,Philipe Favreau,Reto St?cklin,Johannis P. Kamerling,Rolf Boelens.Structure of the O‐Glycosylated Conopeptide CcTx from Conus consors Venom[J]. Chem. Eur. J. . 2012 (3)
  • 8Zhuguo Liu,Haiying Li,Na Liu,Chuanxia Wu,Jizhi Jiang,Junjie Yue,Yuan Jing,Qiuyun Dai.Diversity and evolution of conotoxins in Conus virgo , Conus eburneus , Conus imperialis and Conus marmoreus from the South China Sea[J]. Toxicon . 2012 (6)
  • 9Jon-Paul Bingham,Margaret R. Baker,Joycelyn B. Chun.Analysis of a cone snail’s killer cocktail – The milked venom of Conus geographus[J]. Toxicon . 2012 (6)
  • 10Maria Carolina Spiezia,Cristiano Chiarabelli,Fabio Polticelli.Recombinant expression and insecticidal properties of a Conus ventricosus conotoxin-GST fusion protein[J]. Toxicon . 2012 (5)

二级参考文献48

  • 1le Gall F, Favreau P, Richard G, Letoumeux Y. Molgo J. The strategy used by some piscivorous cone snails to capture their prey: The effects of their venoms on vertebrates and on isolated neuromuscular preparations. Toxicon,1999, 37(7): 985 998.
  • 2Olivera BM. E.E. Just Lecture, 1996. Conus venom peptides, receptor and ion channel targets, and drug design: 50 million years of neuropharmacology.Mol Biol Cell, 1997, 8(11): 2101-2109.
  • 3Terlau H, Shon K J, Grilley M, Stocker M, Stuhmer W, Olivera BM. Strategy for rapid immobilization of prey by a fish-hunting marine snail. Nature, 1996. 381(6578): 148 151.
  • 4Olivera BM, Cruz LJ. Conotoxins, in retrospect. Toxicon. 2001, 3911 ): 7-14.
  • 5Mclntosh JM, Jones RM. Cone venom-from accidental stings to deliberate injection, Toxicon, 2001, 39( 1 ): 1447-1451.
  • 6Jimenez EC, Sherry RP, Lirazan M, Rivier J, Walker C, Abogadie FC.Yoshikami D et al. Novel excitatory Conus peptides define a new conotoxin superfamily. J Neurochem, 2003, 85(3): 610-21.
  • 7England L J, Imperial J, Jacobsen R, Craig AG, Gulyas J, Akhtar M,Rivier J et al. Inactivation ofa serotonin-gated ion channel by a polypeptide toxin from marine snails. Science, 1998, 281(5376): 575-578.
  • 8Sharpe IA, Gehrmann J, Loughnan ML, Thomas L, Adams DA, Atkins A, Palant E et al. Two new classes of conopeptides inhibit the α1-adrenoceptor and noradrenaline transporter. Nat Neurosci, 2001, 4(9): 902-907.
  • 9Jones RM, Bulaj G. Conotoxins-new vistas for peptide therapeutics. Curr Pharm Des, 2000, 6(12): 1249-1285.
  • 10Shen GS, Layer RT, McCabe RT. Conopeptides: From deadly venoms to novel therapeutics. Drug Discov Today, 2000, 5(3): 98-106.

共引文献7

相关作者

内容加载中请稍等...

相关机构

内容加载中请稍等...

相关主题

内容加载中请稍等...

浏览历史

内容加载中请稍等...
;
使用帮助 返回顶部