Respuesta :
Answer:
Batrachotoxin is one of the most potent biotoxins, more toxic than strychnine (250x approx.), causing ventricular fibrillation and neuromuscular toxicity. Its action mechanism is producing a conformational change that allows a permanent state of the channel opened that increases the resting sodium permeability. This generates action potentials in excitable membranes of nerve and muscle; causing the blocking of neuromuscular transmission and evoking muscular contracture. Death results from respiratory paralysis. In addition, BTX also causes arrhythmias, ventricular tachycardia, and fibrillation.
Explanation:
Batrachotixin (BTX, PubChem CID: 6324647), obtained from frogs of the genus Phyllobates of the Choco rain forest of Colombia, activate permanently the voltage-gated sodium channels. Previous work demonstrated that a phenylalanine residue approximately halfway through pore-lining transmembrane segment IVS6 is a critical determinant of channel sensitivity to BTX. In addition, Li 2002 demonstrated an electrostatic ligand-receptor interaction at this site, possibly involving a charged tertiary amine on BTX.
- Cataldi, M. (2016). Batrachotoxin.
- Li, H. L., Hadid, D., & Ragsdale, D. S. (2002). The batrachotoxin receptor on the voltage-gated sodium channel is guarded by the channel activation gate. Molecular pharmacology, 61(4), 905-912.
- National Center for Biotechnology Information. PubChem Database. Batrachotoxin, CID=6324647, https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/compound/Batrachotoxin (accessed on Dec. 4, 2019).