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Beyond Fang's fury: a computational study of the enzyme-membrane interaction and catalytic pathway of the snake venom phospholipase A2 toxin

Title
Beyond Fang's fury: a computational study of the enzyme-membrane interaction and catalytic pathway of the snake venom phospholipase A2 toxin
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2025
Authors
Castro-Amorim, J
(Author)
Other
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Pinto, AV
(Author)
Other
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Mukherjee, AK
(Author)
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Ramos, MJ
(Author)
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Journal
Title: Chemical ScienceImported from Authenticus Search for Journal Publications
Vol. 16
Pages: 1974-1985
ISSN: 2041-6520
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Publicação em ISI Web of Knowledge ISI Web of Knowledge - 0 Citations
Publicação em Scopus Scopus - 0 Citations
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Authenticus ID: P-017-THW
Abstract (EN): Snake venom-secreted phospholipases A2 (svPLA2s) are critical, highly toxic enzymes present in almost all snake venoms. Upon snakebite envenomation, svPLA2s hydrolyze cell membrane phospholipids and induce pathological effects such as paralysis, myonecrosis, inflammation, or pain. Despite its central importance in envenomation, the chemical mechanism of svPLA2s is poorly understood, with detrimental consequences for the design of small-molecule snakebite antidotes, which is highly undesirable given the gravity of the epidemiological data that ranks snakebite as the deadliest neglected tropical disease. We study a member of the svPLA2 family, the Myotoxin-I, which is part of the venom of the Central American pit viper terciopelo (Bothrops asper), a ubiquitous but highly aggressive and dangerous species responsible for the most problematic snakebites in its habitat. Furthermore, PLA2 enzymes are a paradigm of interfacial enzymology, as the complex membrane-enzyme interaction is as important as is crucial for its catalytic process. Here, we explore the detailed interaction between svPLA2 and a 1 : 1 POPC/POPS membrane, and how enzyme binding affects membrane structure and dynamics. We further investigated the two most widely accepted reaction mechanisms for svPLA2s: the 'single-water mechanism' and the 'assisted-water mechanism', using umbrella sampling simulations at the PBE/MM level of theory. We demonstrate that both pathways are catalytically viable. While both pathways occur in two steps, the single-water mechanism yielded a lower activation free energy barrier (20.14 kcal mol-1) for POPC hydrolysis, consistent with experimental and computational values obtained for human PLA2. The reaction mechanisms are similar, albeit not identical, and can be generalized to svPLA2 from most viper species. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that the sole small molecule inhibitor currently undergoing clinical trials for snakebite is a perfect transition state analog. Thus, understanding snake venom sPLA2 chemistry will help find new, effective small molecule inhibitors with anti-snake venom efficacy.
Language: English
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
No. of pages: 12
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