Aman Joseph W, Imperial Julita S, Ueberheide Beatrix, Zhang Min-Min, Aguilar Manuel, Taylor Dylan, Watkins Maren, Yoshikami Doju, Showers-Corneli Patrice, Safavi-Hemami Helena, Biggs Jason, Teichert Russell W, Olivera Baldomero M
Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112;
New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, NY 10016;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Apr 21;112(16):5087-92. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1424435112. Epub 2015 Apr 6.
Prey shifts in carnivorous predators are events that can initiate the accelerated generation of new biodiversity. However, it is seldom possible to reconstruct how the change in prey preference occurred. Here we describe an evolutionary "smoking gun" that illuminates the transition from worm hunting to fish hunting among marine cone snails, resulting in the adaptive radiation of fish-hunting lineages comprising ∼100 piscivorous Conus species. This smoking gun is δ-conotoxin TsVIA, a peptide from the venom of Conus tessulatus that delays inactivation of vertebrate voltage-gated sodium channels. C. tessulatus is a species in a worm-hunting clade, which is phylogenetically closely related to the fish-hunting cone snail specialists. The discovery of a δ-conotoxin that potently acts on vertebrate sodium channels in the venom of a worm-hunting cone snail suggests that a closely related ancestral toxin enabled the transition from worm hunting to fish hunting, as δ-conotoxins are highly conserved among fish hunters and critical to their mechanism of prey capture; this peptide, δ-conotoxin TsVIA, has striking sequence similarity to these δ-conotoxins from piscivorous cone snail venoms. Calcium-imaging studies on dissociated dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons revealed the peptide's putative molecular target (voltage-gated sodium channels) and mechanism of action (inhibition of channel inactivation). The results were confirmed by electrophysiology. This work demonstrates how elucidating the specific interactions between toxins and receptors from phylogenetically well-defined lineages can uncover molecular mechanisms that underlie significant evolutionary transitions.
食肉动物的猎物转换是能够引发新生物多样性加速形成的事件。然而,很少有可能重构猎物偏好的变化是如何发生的。在此,我们描述了一个进化上的“确凿证据”,它揭示了海洋芋螺从捕食蠕虫到捕食鱼类的转变,从而导致了包含约100种食鱼芋螺物种的捕食鱼类谱系的适应性辐射。这个确凿证据就是δ-芋螺毒素TsVIA,一种来自细纹芋螺毒液的肽,它能延迟脊椎动物电压门控钠通道的失活。细纹芋螺是一个捕食蠕虫分支中的物种,在系统发育上与捕食鱼类的芋螺专家密切相关。在捕食蠕虫的芋螺毒液中发现一种能有效作用于脊椎动物钠通道的δ-芋螺毒素,这表明一种密切相关的祖先毒素促成了从捕食蠕虫到捕食鱼类的转变,因为δ-芋螺毒素在捕食鱼类的芋螺中高度保守,并且对它们的猎物捕获机制至关重要;这种肽,δ-芋螺毒素TsVIA,与来自食鱼芋螺毒液的这些δ-芋螺毒素具有显著的序列相似性。对解离的背根神经节(DRG)神经元进行的钙成像研究揭示了该肽假定的分子靶点(电压门控钠通道)和作用机制(抑制通道失活)。电生理学证实了这些结果。这项工作展示了阐明来自系统发育定义明确的谱系的毒素与受体之间的特定相互作用如何能够揭示重大进化转变背后的分子机制。