NMR Structural Studies on Novel Disintegrin, Saxatilin from Gloydius saxatilis Venom

  • Shin, Joon (Department of Biochemistry, College of Science, Yonsei University) ;
  • Lee, Dong-Hee (Department of Biochemistry, College of Science, Yonsei University) ;
  • Hong, Sung-Yu (Department of Biochemistry, College of Science, Yonsei University) ;
  • Chung, Kwang-Hoe (Cardiovascular Research Institute and BK21 Project for Medical Sciences, College of Medicine, Yonsei University) ;
  • Kim, Doo-Sik (Department of Biochemistry, College of Science, Yonsei University) ;
  • Lee, Weon-Tae (Department of Biochemistry, College of Science, Yonsei University)
  • Published : 2007.06.20

Abstract

A new disintegrin protein named saxatilin was purified from Korean snake venom (Gloydius saxatilis). Saxatilin is a 73 residue small ploypeptide, which has a primary recognition motif in extracellular matrix, Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence. Data from inhibition activity assay for the ${\alpha}_v{\beta}_3$ integrin showed that saxatilin showed about 5000-fold higher activity than those of RGD peptides, suggesting that RGD sequence may not be sufficient to induce full cellular function of this site. The solution structures calculated from NMR data were well converged for backbone atoms except RGD loop. The structure revealed that most of tight turns are stabilized by medium range NOE contacts and the RGD motif is located far from the rigid core of the C-terminal domain. The three-dimensional fold and biological function of saxatilin are discussed with those of salmosin, which is a disintegrin protein derived from Agkistrodon halys brevicaudus.

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