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Ophioluxin, a convulxin-like C-type lectin from Ophiophagus hannah (King cobra) is a powerful platelet activator via glycoprotein VI. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ophioluxin, a strong platelet activator extracted from King cobra venom, has a molecular mass of 85 kDa under nonreducing conditions and breaks down into two subunits of 16 and 17 kDa upon reduction, with N-terminal sequences similar to convulxin.
  • Ophioluxin is 2-4 times more effective than convulxin in inducing platelet aggregation and causes similar increases in calcium levels, although it doesn’t agglutinate fixed platelets even at high concentrations.
  • It is the first convulxin-like C-type lectin identified in the Elapidae snake family and has unique properties that differentiate it from other C-type lectins like echicetin.

Article Abstract

Ophioluxin, a potent platelet agonist, was purified from the venom of Ophiophagus hannah (King cobra). Under nonreducing conditions it has a mass of 85 kDa, similar to convulxin, and on reduction gives two subunits with masses of 16 and 17 kDa, slightly larger than those of convulxin. The N-terminal sequences of both subunits are very similar to those of convulxin and other C-type lectins. Ophioluxin induces a pattern of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins in platelets like that caused by convulxin, when using appropriate concentrations based on aggregation response, because it is about 2-4 times more powerful as agonist than the latter. Ophioluxin and convulxin induce [Ca(2+)](i) elevation both in platelets and in Dami megakaryocytic cells, and each of these C-type lectins desensitizes responses to the other. Convulxin agglutinates fixed platelets at 2 microg/ml, whereas ophioluxin does not, even at 80 microg/ml. Ophioluxin resembles convulxin more than echicetin or alboaggregin B because polyclonal anti-ophioluxin antibodies recognize both ophioluxin and convulxin, but not echicetin, and platelets adhere to and spread on ophioluxin- or convulxin-precoated surfaces in the same way that is clearly different from their behavior on an alboaggregin B surface. Immobilized ophioluxin was used to isolate the glycoprotein VI-Fcgamma complex from resting platelets, which also contained Fyn, Lyn, Syk, LAT, and SLP76. Ophioluxin is the first multiheterodimeric, convulxin-like snake C-type lectin, as well as the first platelet agonist, to be described from the Elapidae snake family.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M204372200DOI Listing

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