STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF PEPTIDE AND PROTEIN TOXINS FROM MARINE ORGANISMS

Authors
Citation
Rs. Norton, STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF PEPTIDE AND PROTEIN TOXINS FROM MARINE ORGANISMS, Journal of toxicology. Toxin reviews, 17(2), 1998, pp. 99-130
Citations number
105
Categorie Soggetti
Toxicology
ISSN journal
07313837
Volume
17
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
99 - 130
Database
ISI
SICI code
0731-3837(1998)17:2<99:SAFOPA>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
The three-dimensional structures of peptide and protein toxins from th e sea are of interest for a variety of reasons. They adopt many of the structural folds found in their terrestrial counterparts, as expected , but also have some that are unique. They are valuable structural pro bes of their cognate receptor binding sites, frequently on ion channel proteins, and play important roles in mapping these binding sites and in testing and refining models of receptor structures. Furthermore, t he often exquisite selectivity of toxins for certain subtypes of a giv en receptor makes them attractive as potential therapeutic agents, in which case a knowledge of their structure becomes an essential part of subsequent drug design strategies. This review summarises current inf ormation on the structures of marine toxins, determined by either X-ra y crystallography or, more often, nuclear magnetic resonance spectrosc opy. Where the amino acid residues essential for activity have been id entified, or where the toxin binding site on a receptor has been mappe d, these results are also discussed.