Preparation of a pure monoiodo derivative of the bee venom neurotoxin apamin and its binding properties to rat brain synaptosomes
- PMID: 6277913
Preparation of a pure monoiodo derivative of the bee venom neurotoxin apamin and its binding properties to rat brain synaptosomes
Abstract
The preparation and purification of an active monoiodo derivative of apamin is described. Radiolabeled monoiodoapamin (2000 Ci/mmol) binds specifically to rat brain synaptosomes at 0 degrees C and pH 7.5 with a second order rate constant of association (ka = 2.6 x 10(7) M-1 s-1) and a first order rate constant of dissociation (kd = 3.8 x 10(-4) s-1). The maximal binding capacity is 12.5 fmol/mg of protein and the dissociation constant is 15-25 pM for the monoiodo derivative and 10 pM for the native toxin. The apamin receptor is destroyed by proteases suggesting that it is of a proteic nature. Neurotensin and its COOH-terminal partial sequences are the only molecules unrelated to apamin that are able to displace monoiodoapamin from its receptor at low concentrations. Half-displacement occurs at 170 nM neurotensin. This property is due to the presence in the COOH-terminal sequence of neurotensin of two contiguous arginine residues, a structure analogous to that of the apamin active site. The binding of monoiodoapamin to its receptor is sensitive to cations. Increasing K+ or Rb+ concentrations from 10 microM to 5 mM selectively enhances the binding by a factor of 1.8. Increasing the concentration of any cation from 1 to 100 mM completely inhibits iodoapamin binding. Both effects are due to a cation-induced modulation of the affinity of monoidoapamin for its receptor without any change of the maximal toxin binding capacity of synaptosomes. Guanidinium and molecules containing a guanidinium group are better inhibitors of iodoapamin binding than other inorganic cations or positively charged organic molecules.
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