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Biophys J, November 2002, p. 2370-2385, Vol. 83, No. 5


*Center for Drug Discovery and Design, State Key Laboratory of Drug
Research, Shanghai Institute of Meteria Medica, Shanghai Institutes of
Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai 200031, China;
Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University
of Houston, Houston, Texas 77204 USA
The recognition of the scorpion toxin maurotoxin (MTX) by
the voltage-gated potassium (Kv1) channels, Kv1.1, Kv1.2, and Kv1.3, has been studied by means of Brownian dynamics (BD) simulations. All of
the 35 available structures of MTX in the Protein Data Bank
(http://www.rcsb.org/pdb) determined by nuclear magnetic resonance were
considered during the simulations, which indicated that the
conformation of MTX significantly affected both the recognition and the
binding between MTX and the Kv1 channels. Comparing the top five
highest-frequency structures of MTX binding to the Kv1 channels, we
found that the Kv1.2 channel, with the highest docking frequencies and
the lowest electrostatic interaction energies, was the most favorable
for MTX binding, whereas Kv1.1 was intermediate, and Kv1.3 was the
least favorable one. Among the 35 structures of MTX, the 10th structure
docked into the binding site of the Kv1.2 channel with the highest
probability and the most favorable electrostatic interactions. From the
MTX-Kv1.2 binding model, we identified the critical residues for the
recognition of these two proteins through triplet contact analyses. MTX
locates around the extracellular mouth of the Kv1 channels, making
contacts with its
-sheets. Lys23, a conserved amino acid in the
scorpion toxins, protrudes into the pore of the Kv1.2 channel and forms
two hydrogen bonds with the conserved residues Gly401(D) and Tyr400(C)
and one hydrophobic contact with Gly401(C) of the Kv1.2 channel. The critical triplet contacts for recognition between MTX and the Kv1.2
channel are Lys23(MTX)-Asp402(C)(Kv1), Lys27(MTX)-Asp378(D)(Kv1), and
Lys30(MTX)-Asp402(A)(Kv1). In addition, six hydrogen-bonding interactions are formed between residues Lys23, Lys27, Lys30, and Tyr32
of MTX and residues Gly401, Tyr400, Asp402, Asp378, and Thr406 of
Kv1.2. Many of them are formed by side chains of residues of MTX and
backbone atoms of the Kv1.2 channel. Five hydrophobic contacts exist
between residues Pro20, Lys23, Lys30 and Tyr32 of MTX and residues
Asp402, Val404, Gly401, and Arg377 of the Kv1.2 channel. The simulation
results are in agreement with the previous molecular biology
experiments and explain the binding phenomena between MTX and Kv1
channels at the molecular level. The consistency between the results of
the BD simulations and the experimental data indicated that our
three-dimensional model of the MTX-Kv1.2 channel complex is reasonable
and can be used in additional biological studies, such as rational
design of novel therapeutic agents blocking the voltage-gated channels and in mutagenesis studies in both the toxins and the Kv1 channels. In
particular, both the BD simulations and the molecular mechanics refinements indicate that residue Asp378 of the Kv1.2 channel is
critical for its recognition and binding functionality toward MTX. This
phenomenon has not been appreciated in the previous mutagenesis
experiments, indicating this might be a new clue for additional
functional study of Kv1 channels.
Biophys J, November 2002, p. 2370-2385, Vol. 83, No. 5
© 2002 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/02/11/2370/16 $2.00
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