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α-Conotoxins active at α3-containing nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and their molecular determinants for selective inhibition

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posted on 2024-11-16, 03:15 authored by Hartmut Cuny, Rilei Yu, Han Shen TaeHan Shen Tae, Shiva N Kompella, David AdamsDavid Adams
Neuronal α3-containing nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) and non-neuronal tissues are implicated in a number of severe disease conditions ranging from cancer to cardiovascular diseases and chronic pain. However, despite the physiological characterization of mouse models and cell lines, the precise pathophysiology of nAChRs outside the CNS remains not well understood, in part because there is a lack of subtype-selective antagonists. α-Conotoxins isolated from cone snail venom exhibit characteristic individual selectivity profiles for nAChRs and, therefore, are excellent tools to study the determinants for nAChR-antagonist interactions. Given that human α3β4 subtype selective α-conotoxins are scarce and this is a major nAChR subtype in the PNS, the design of new peptides targeting this nAChR subtype is desirable. Recent studies using α-conotoxins RegIIA and AuIB, in combination with nAChR site-directed mutagenesis and computational modelling, have shed light onto specific nAChR residues, which determine the selectivity of the α-conotoxins for the human α3β2 and α3β4 subtypes. Publications describing the selectivity profile and binding sites of other α-conotoxins confirm that subtype-selective nAChR antagonists often work through common mechanisms by interacting with the same structural components and sites on the receptor.

Funding

Nicotinic receptor structure and function probed with conotoxins

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Cuny, H., Yu, R., Tae, H., Kompella, S. N. & Adams, D. J. (2018). α-Conotoxins active at α3-containing nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and their molecular determinants for selective inhibition. British Journal of Pharmacology, 175 (11), 1855-1868.

Journal title

British Journal of Pharmacology

Volume

175

Issue

11

Pagination

1855-1868

Language

English

RIS ID

114859

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