Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2065983 | Toxicon | 2008 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
The considerable diversity of Conus peptides in the I1-superfamily provides a rare opportunity to define parameters important for the post-translational l- to d-isomerization of amino acids. This subtlest of post-translational modifications is not readily detectable by most techniques, and it would be a considerable advance if one could predict its potential occurrence purely from gene sequences. We previously described three I1-conotoxins, ι-RXIA (formerly designated r11a), r11b and r11c, each containing a d-amino acid at the third position from the C-terminus. In this work, we investigated two novel I1-superfamily members, r11d and ar11a, which we show have only l-amino acids. Based on these observations and an analysis of cDNA sequences of other group members, we suggest that there is a rule to predict d-amino acids in I1-superfamily peptides. Two factors are important: the residue to be modified should be three amino acids from the C-terminus of the precursor sequence, and it should be in a suitable sequence context. We apply the rule to other members of the I1-superfamily, to determine a priori which are probably modified.
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Authors
Olga Buczek, Elsie C. Jimenez, Doju Yoshikami, Julita S. Imperial, Maren Watkins, Alex Morrison, Baldomero M. Olivera,