Fry Bryan G, Scheib Holger, van der Weerd Louise, Young Bruce, McNaughtan Judith, Ramjan S F Ryan, Vidal Nicolas, Poelmann Robert E, Norman Janette A
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Bio21 Molecular Science and Biotechnology Institute, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia.
Mol Cell Proteomics. 2008 Feb;7(2):215-46. doi: 10.1074/mcp.M700094-MCP200. Epub 2007 Sep 12.
Venom is a key innovation underlying the evolution of advanced snakes (Caenophidia). Despite this, very little is known about venom system structural diversification, toxin recruitment event timings, or toxin molecular evolution. A multidisciplinary approach was used to examine the diversification of the venom system and associated toxins across the full range of the approximately 100 million-year-old advanced snake clade with a particular emphasis upon families that have not secondarily evolved a front-fanged venom system ( approximately 80% of the 2500 species). Analysis of cDNA libraries revealed complex venom transcriptomes containing multiple toxin types including three finger toxins, cobra venom factor, cysteine-rich secretory protein, hyaluronidase, kallikrein, kunitz, lectin, matrix metalloprotease, phospholipase A(2), snake venom metalloprotease/a disintegrin and metalloprotease, and waprin. High levels of sequence diversity were observed, including mutations in structural and functional residues, changes in cysteine spacing, and major deletions/truncations. Morphological analysis comprising gross dissection, histology, and magnetic resonance imaging also demonstrated extensive modification of the venom system architecture in non-front-fanged snakes in contrast to the conserved structure of the venom system within the independently evolved front-fanged elapid or viperid snakes. Further, a reduction in the size and complexity of the venom system was observed in species in which constriction has been secondarily evolved as the preferred method of prey capture or dietary preference has switched from live prey to eggs or to slugs/snails. Investigation of the timing of toxin recruitment events across the entire advanced snake radiation indicates that the evolution of advanced venom systems in three front-fanged lineages is associated with recruitment of new toxin types or explosive diversification of existing toxin types. These results support the role of venom as a key evolutionary innovation in the diversification of advanced snakes and identify a potential role for non-front-fanged venom toxins as a rich source for lead compounds for drug design and development.
毒液是高级蛇类(新蛇亚目)进化的关键创新因素。尽管如此,对于毒液系统的结构多样性、毒素招募事件的时间安排或毒素分子进化,人们知之甚少。本研究采用多学科方法,对整个约有一亿年历史的高级蛇类分支中的毒液系统和相关毒素的多样性进行了研究,特别关注那些没有再次进化出前沟牙毒液系统的蛇类家族(约占2500个物种的80%)。对cDNA文库的分析揭示了复杂的毒液转录组,其中包含多种毒素类型,包括三指毒素、眼镜蛇毒因子、富含半胱氨酸的分泌蛋白、透明质酸酶、激肽释放酶、库尼兹型蛋白酶、凝集素、基质金属蛋白酶、磷脂酶A(2)、蛇毒金属蛋白酶/去整合素和金属蛋白酶,以及瓦普林。观察到了高水平的序列多样性,包括结构和功能残基的突变、半胱氨酸间距的变化以及主要的缺失/截断。包括大体解剖、组织学和磁共振成像在内的形态学分析也表明,与独立进化出前沟牙的眼镜蛇科或蝰蛇科蛇类中保守的毒液系统结构相比,后沟牙蛇类的毒液系统结构发生了广泛的改变。此外,在那些已经再次进化出绞杀作为首选捕食方式,或者食性偏好从活猎物转变为卵或蛞蝓/蜗牛的物种中,观察到毒液系统的大小和复杂性有所降低。对整个高级蛇类辐射范围内毒素招募事件时间的研究表明,三个前沟牙谱系中高级毒液系统的进化与新毒素类型的招募或现有毒素类型的爆发式多样化有关。这些结果支持了毒液作为高级蛇类多样化过程中关键进化创新因素的作用,并确定了后沟牙毒液毒素作为药物设计和开发先导化合物丰富来源的潜在作用。