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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

The presence in pig brain of an endogenous equivalent of apamin, the bee venom peptide that specifically blocks Ca2+-dependent K+ channels.

An apamin-like factor has been isolated from pig brain after extraction of the tissue and purification on sulfopropyl-Sephadex C-25 and on reversed-phase high pressure liquid chromatography. The apamin-like factor has the following properties: (i) it prevents 125I-labeled apamin binding to its specific receptor site present on rat brain synaptosomes, (ii) it is active in the radioimmunoassay for apamin (i.e., it prevents 125I-labeled apamin precipitation by anti-apamin antibodies), (iii) it induces contraction of guinea pig intestinal smooth muscle previously relaxed with epinephrine, and (iv) it blocks Ca2+-dependent K+ channels responsible for the long-lasting afterpotential hyperpolarization following the action potential in rat skeletal muscle cells in culture. All these properties are those of apamin itself. The apamin-like factor is a peptide that, like apamin, is destroyed by trypsin and unaffected by chymotrypsin. These results suggest the presence in mammalian brain of a potent Ca2+-dependent K+-channel modulator.[1]

References

  1. The presence in pig brain of an endogenous equivalent of apamin, the bee venom peptide that specifically blocks Ca2+-dependent K+ channels. Fosset, M., Schmid-Antomarchi, H., Hugues, M., Romey, G., Lazdunski, M. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. (1984) [Pubmed]
 
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