The three-dimensional structure of the insect-directed toxin from the scorpion Androctonus australis Hector has been modelled using computer graphics and energy-minimization techniques. The model-building procedure was based on the known high resolution structures of two scorpion toxins of different types: toxin II from A. australis Hector, an alpha-toxin, and variant 3 from Centruroides sculpturatus Ewing that belongs to the beta-toxin structural group. Although the insect-directed toxin has one atypical disulfide bridge, the general structural features of the scorpion toxin family, including the presence of a "conserved-hydrophobic" surface, seem to be well-conserved. However, the orientation and length of some loops and regions thought to be important for toxicity are different for alpha-toxins, beta-toxins, and the insect-directed toxin. Thus, the binding of a scorpion toxin to its site on the Na+ channel seems to be based on (1) the presence of a surface containing a series of conserved and/or hydrophobic residues, more or less common to all these molecules, and (2) an adjacent area that modulates the specificity of the interaction.