Experimentally based model of a complex between a snake toxin and the α7 nicotinic receptor

  1. Carole Fruchart-Gaillard*,
  2. Bernard Gilquin*,
  3. Stéphanie Antil-Delbeke*,
  4. Nicolas Le Novère,
  5. Toru Tamiya*,,
  6. Pierre-Jean Corringer,
  7. Jean-Pierre Changeux,
  8. André Ménez*,§, and
  9. Denis Servent*,§
  1. *Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique, Département d'Ingénierie et d'Études des Protéines, 91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France; Récepteurs et Cognition, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique/Unité de Recherche Associée D1284, Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris Cedex, France; and Department of Chemistry, Sophia University, 102-8554 Tokyo, Japan
  1. Contributed by Jean-Pierre Changeux

Abstract

To understand how snake neurotoxins interact with nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, we have elaborated an experimentally based model of the α–cobratoxin–α7 receptor complex. This model was achieved by using (i) a three-dimensional model of the α7 extracellular domain derived from the crystallographic structure of the homologous acetylcholine-binding protein, (ii) the previously solved x-ray structure of the toxin, and (iii) nine pairs of residues identified by cycle-mutant experiments to make contacts between the α-cobratoxin and α7 receptor. Because the receptor loop F occludes entrance of the toxin binding pocket, we submitted this loop to a dynamics simulation and selected a conformation that allowed the toxin to reach its binding site. The three-dimensional structure of the toxin–receptor complex model was validated a posteriori by an additional double-mutant experiment. The model shows that the toxin interacts perpendicularly to the receptor axis, in an equatorial position of the extracellular domain. The tip of the toxin central loop plugs into the receptor between two subunits, just below the functional receptor loop C, the C-terminal tail of the toxin making adjacent additional interactions at the receptor surface. The receptor establishes major contacts with the toxin by its loop C, which is assisted by principal (loops A and B) and complementary (loops D, F, and 1) functional regions. This model explains the antagonistic properties of the toxin toward the neuronal receptor and opens the way to the design of new antagonists.

Footnotes

  • § To whom reprint requests may be addressed. E-mail: denis.servent{at}cea.fr or andre.menez{at}cea.fr.

  • Abbreviations:
    AChR,
    nicotinic acetylcholine receptor;
    AChBP,
    acetylcholine-binding protein;
    3D,
    three-dimensional;
    α-Cbtx,
    α-cobratoxin;
    Bgtx,
    bungarotoxin;
    α-ImI,
    conotoxin ImI
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