
alpha-Conotoxins (alpha-CgTxs) are a family of Cys-enriched peptides found in several marine snails from the genus Conus. These small peptides behave pharmacologically as competitive antagonists of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR). The data indicate that (1) alpha-CgTxs are able to discriminate between muscle- and neuronal-type AChRs and even among distinct AChR subtypes; (2) the binding sites for alpha-CgTxs are located, like other cholinergic ligands, at the interface of alpha and non-alpha subunits (gamma, delta, and epsilon for the muscle-type AChR, and beta for several neuronal-type AChRs); (3) some alpha-CgTxs differentiate the high- from the low-affinity binding site found on either alpha/non-alpha subunit interface; and that (4) specific residues in the cholinergic binding site are energetically coupled with their corresponding pairs in the toxin stabilizing the alpha-CgTx-AChR complex. The alpha-CgTxs have proven to be excellent probes for studying the structure and function of the AChR family.
Models, Molecular, Neurons, Muscles, Molecular Sequence Data, Snails, Nicotinic Antagonists, Receptors, Nicotinic, Protein Structure, Secondary, Substrate Specificity, Animals, Humans, Amino Acid Sequence, Conotoxins
Models, Molecular, Neurons, Muscles, Molecular Sequence Data, Snails, Nicotinic Antagonists, Receptors, Nicotinic, Protein Structure, Secondary, Substrate Specificity, Animals, Humans, Amino Acid Sequence, Conotoxins
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