Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish

Marine pufferfish generally involve a potent neurotoxin, tetrodotoxin (TTX), which might be the leading cause for many human intoxications. It blocks nervous impulses’ conduction along nerve fibers and axons during the act, and the LD50 for the mouse is 10 nanograms. Being much larger than the sodiu...

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Main Authors: Bahar Tokur, Koray Korkmaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Natural and Engineering Sciences 2021-01-01
Series:Natural and Engineering Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.nesciences.com/download.php?id=626
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spelling doaj-b7dc8ea6bd1e42e498ca2c00fad2dd562021-02-14T22:06:42ZengNatural and Engineering SciencesNatural and Engineering Sciences2458-89892458-89892021-01-0161395210.28978/nesciences.868077Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fishBahar TokurKoray KorkmazMarine pufferfish generally involve a potent neurotoxin, tetrodotoxin (TTX), which might be the leading cause for many human intoxications. It blocks nervous impulses’ conduction along nerve fibers and axons during the act, and the LD50 for the mouse is 10 nanograms. Being much larger than the sodium ion, TTX acts as a cork of a bottle, prevents sodium from flowing until it diffuses slowly. The TTX expanse appears to be species-specific in pufferfish bodies. The toxin is thought to bioaccumulate via the marine food based on the observations that marine pufferfishes that are cultured are not toxic, and non-toxic cultured pufferfishes become toxic when they feed on TTXcontaining artificial diets. TTX-bearing animals show incredibly high resistance to TTX, and therefore TTX presumably retains or accumulates as a biological defense substance. These animals carrying TTX can accumulate toxins in their bodies despite not killing themselves is an object of interest. Fort his reason, and it is argued that TTX is wrapped in a particular protein and does not bind directly to the target's side-sodium channel, and therefore does not induce intoxication. The pufferfish TTX-binding protein (PSTBP) was first isolated as a potential TTX-carrier protein from the plasma of the marine pufferfish Takifugu niphobles. This protein is discovered to be a dimeric glycoprotein and formed a non-covalent dimer.https://www.nesciences.com/download.php?id=626pufferfishtetrodotoxin (ttx)ttx-binding protein
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bahar Tokur
Koray Korkmaz
spellingShingle Bahar Tokur
Koray Korkmaz
Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
Natural and Engineering Sciences
pufferfish
tetrodotoxin (ttx)
ttx-binding protein
author_facet Bahar Tokur
Koray Korkmaz
author_sort Bahar Tokur
title Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
title_short Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
title_full Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
title_fullStr Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
title_full_unstemmed Tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
title_sort tetrodotoxin binding protein in the marine puffer fish
publisher Natural and Engineering Sciences
series Natural and Engineering Sciences
issn 2458-8989
2458-8989
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Marine pufferfish generally involve a potent neurotoxin, tetrodotoxin (TTX), which might be the leading cause for many human intoxications. It blocks nervous impulses’ conduction along nerve fibers and axons during the act, and the LD50 for the mouse is 10 nanograms. Being much larger than the sodium ion, TTX acts as a cork of a bottle, prevents sodium from flowing until it diffuses slowly. The TTX expanse appears to be species-specific in pufferfish bodies. The toxin is thought to bioaccumulate via the marine food based on the observations that marine pufferfishes that are cultured are not toxic, and non-toxic cultured pufferfishes become toxic when they feed on TTXcontaining artificial diets. TTX-bearing animals show incredibly high resistance to TTX, and therefore TTX presumably retains or accumulates as a biological defense substance. These animals carrying TTX can accumulate toxins in their bodies despite not killing themselves is an object of interest. Fort his reason, and it is argued that TTX is wrapped in a particular protein and does not bind directly to the target's side-sodium channel, and therefore does not induce intoxication. The pufferfish TTX-binding protein (PSTBP) was first isolated as a potential TTX-carrier protein from the plasma of the marine pufferfish Takifugu niphobles. This protein is discovered to be a dimeric glycoprotein and formed a non-covalent dimer.
topic pufferfish
tetrodotoxin (ttx)
ttx-binding protein
url https://www.nesciences.com/download.php?id=626
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