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. 2003 May;60(5):972–978. doi: 10.1007/s00018-003-2354-x

Isolation and characterization of hainantoxin-IV, a novel antagonist of tetrodotoxin-sensitive sodium channels from the Chinese bird spider Selenocosmia hainana

Z Liu 1, J Dai 1, Z Chen 1, W Hu 1, Y Xiao 1, S Liang 1
PMCID: PMC11138680  PMID: 12827284

Abstract:

A neurotoxin, named hainantoxin-IV, was purified from the venom of the spider Selenocosmia hainana. The amino acid sequence was determined by Edman degradation, revealing it to be a 35-residue polypeptide amidated at its C terminal and including three disulfide bridges: Cys2-Cys17, Cys9-Cys24, and Cys16-Cys31 assigned by partial reduction and sequence analysis. Hainantoxin-IV shares 80% sequence identity with huwentoxin-IV from the spider S. huwena, a potent antagonist that acts at site 1 on tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-S) sodium channels, suggesting that hainantoxin-IV adopts an inhibitor cystine knot structural motif like huwentoin-IV. Under whole-cell voltage-clamp conditions, this toxin has no effect on tetrodotoxin-resistant voltage-gated sodium channels in adult rat dorsal root ganglion neurons, while it blocks TTX-S sodium channels in a manner similar to huwentoxin-IV, and the actions of both toxins on sodium currents are very similar to that of tetrodotoxin. Thus, they define a new family of spider toxins affecting sodium channels.

Keywords: Key words: Spider toxin; HNTX-IV; HWTX-IV; disulfide bridges; sodium channels; inhibitor cystine knot (ICK) structural motif.

Footnotes

Received 9 December 2002; received after revision 10 February 2003; accepted 28 February 2003

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ID="*"Corresponding author.


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