Ecology and Evolution Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University, Okinawa, Japan.
Animal Venomics Group, Justus Leibig University, Giessen, Germany.
BMC Biol. 2021 Dec 23;19(1):268. doi: 10.1186/s12915-021-01191-1.
Evolution can occur with surprising predictability when organisms face similar ecological challenges. For most traits, it is difficult to ascertain whether this occurs due to constraints imposed by the number of possible phenotypic solutions or because of parallel responses by shared genetic and regulatory architecture. Exceptionally, oral venoms are a tractable model of trait evolution, being largely composed of proteinaceous toxins that have evolved in many tetrapods, ranging from reptiles to mammals. Given the diversity of venomous lineages, they are believed to have evolved convergently, even though biochemically similar toxins occur in all taxa.
Here, we investigate whether ancestral genes harbouring similar biochemical activity may have primed venom evolution, focusing on the origins of kallikrein-like serine proteases that form the core of most vertebrate oral venoms. Using syntenic relationships between genes flanking known toxins, we traced the origin of kallikreins to a single locus containing one or more nearby paralogous kallikrein-like clusters. Additionally, phylogenetic analysis of vertebrate serine proteases revealed that kallikrein-like toxins in mammals and reptiles are genetically distinct from non-toxin ones.
Given the shared regulatory and genetic machinery, these findings suggest that tetrapod venoms evolved by co-option of proteins that were likely already present in saliva. We term such genes 'toxipotent'-in the case of salivary kallikreins they already had potent vasodilatory activity that was weaponized by venomous lineages. Furthermore, the ubiquitous distribution of kallikreins across vertebrates suggests that the evolution of envenomation may be more common than previously recognized, blurring the line between venomous and non-venomous animals.
当生物体面临相似的生态挑战时,进化可以以惊人的可预测性发生。对于大多数特征,很难确定这是由于可能的表型解决方案的数量限制造成的,还是由于共享的遗传和调节结构的平行反应造成的。例外的是,口腔毒液是一种可处理的特征进化模型,主要由蛋白质毒素组成,这些毒素在从爬行动物到哺乳动物的许多四足动物中进化而来。鉴于毒液谱系的多样性,人们认为它们是趋同进化的,尽管所有分类群中都存在生物化学上相似的毒素。
在这里,我们研究了具有相似生化活性的祖先基因是否可能引发毒液进化,重点研究了形成大多数脊椎动物口腔毒液核心的激肽释放酶样丝氨酸蛋白酶的起源。利用已知毒素侧翼基因之间的同基因关系,我们追踪到激肽释放酶的起源是一个包含一个或多个附近的同源激肽释放酶样簇的单一基因座。此外,脊椎动物丝氨酸蛋白酶的系统发育分析表明,哺乳动物和爬行动物中的激肽释放酶样毒素在遗传上与非毒素不同。
鉴于共享的调节和遗传机制,这些发现表明四足动物毒液是通过对可能已经存在于唾液中的蛋白质的共同作用而进化而来的。我们将此类基因称为“毒效基因”——就唾液激肽释放酶而言,它们已经具有强烈的血管扩张活性,被毒液谱系武器化。此外,激肽释放酶在脊椎动物中的普遍分布表明,毒液的进化可能比以前认识到的更为普遍,模糊了有毒动物和无毒动物之间的界限。