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    Neuron. 1995 Oct;15(4):941-9.

    An inhibitor of the Kv2.1 potassium channel isolated from the venom of a Chilean tarantula.

    Swartz KJ, MacKinnon R.

    Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.

    The Kv2.1 voltage-activated K+ channel, a Shab-related K+ channel isolated from rat brain, is insensitive to previously identified peptide inhibitors. We have isolated two peptides from the venom of a Chilean tarantula, G. spatulata, that inhibit the Kv2.1 K+ channel. The two peptides, hanatoxin1 (HaTx1) and hanatoxin2 (HaTx2) are unrelated in primary sequence to other K+ channel inhibitors. The activity of HaTx was verified by synthesizing it in a bacterial expression system. The concentration dependence for both the degree of inhibition at equilibrium (Kd = 42 nM) and the kinetics of inhibition (kon = 3.7 x 10(4) M-1s-1; koff = 1.3 x 10(-3) s-1), are consistent with a bimolecular reaction between HaTx and the Kv2.1 K+ channel. Shaker-related, Shaw-related, and eag K+ channels were relatively insensitive to HaTx, whereas a Shal-related K+ channel was sensitive. Regions outside the scorpion toxin binding site (S5-S6 linker) determine sensitivity to HaTx. HaTx introduces a new class of K+ channel inhibitors that will be useful probes for studying K+ channel structure and function.

    PMID: 7576642 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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