Profundiconus is the most divergent cone snail genus and its unique phylogenetic position, sister to the rest of the family Conidae, makes it a key taxon for examining venom evolution and diversity. Venom gland and foot transcriptomes of Profundiconus cf. vaubani and Profundiconus neocaledonicus were de novo assembled, annotated, and analyzed for differential expression. One hundred and thirty-seven venom components were identified from P. cf. vaubani and 82 from P. neocaledonicus, with only four shared by both species. The majority of the transcript diversity was composed of putative peptides, including conotoxins, profunditoxins, turripeptides, insulin, and prohormone-4. However, there were also a significant percentage of other putative venom components such as chymotrypsin and L-rhamnose-binding lectin. The large majority of conotoxins appeared to be from new gene superfamilies, three of which are highly different from previously reported venom peptide toxins. Their low conotoxin diversity and the type of insulin found suggested that these species, for which no ecological information are available, have a worm or molluscan diet associated with a narrow dietary breadth. Our results indicate that Profundiconus venom is highly distinct from that of other cone snails, and therefore important for examining venom evolution in the Conidae family.

Venom diversity and evolution in the most divergent cone snail genus Profundiconus / Fassio, G.; Modica, M. V.; Mary, L.; Zaharias, P.; Fedosov, A. E.; Gorson, J.; Kantor, Y. I.; Holford, M.; Puillandre, N.. - In: TOXINS. - ISSN 2072-6651. - 11:11(2019), p. 623. [10.3390/toxins11110623]

Venom diversity and evolution in the most divergent cone snail genus Profundiconus

Fassio G.
Primo
;
Modica M. V.;
2019

Abstract

Profundiconus is the most divergent cone snail genus and its unique phylogenetic position, sister to the rest of the family Conidae, makes it a key taxon for examining venom evolution and diversity. Venom gland and foot transcriptomes of Profundiconus cf. vaubani and Profundiconus neocaledonicus were de novo assembled, annotated, and analyzed for differential expression. One hundred and thirty-seven venom components were identified from P. cf. vaubani and 82 from P. neocaledonicus, with only four shared by both species. The majority of the transcript diversity was composed of putative peptides, including conotoxins, profunditoxins, turripeptides, insulin, and prohormone-4. However, there were also a significant percentage of other putative venom components such as chymotrypsin and L-rhamnose-binding lectin. The large majority of conotoxins appeared to be from new gene superfamilies, three of which are highly different from previously reported venom peptide toxins. Their low conotoxin diversity and the type of insulin found suggested that these species, for which no ecological information are available, have a worm or molluscan diet associated with a narrow dietary breadth. Our results indicate that Profundiconus venom is highly distinct from that of other cone snails, and therefore important for examining venom evolution in the Conidae family.
2019
Conidae; Conotoxins; Transcriptome; Turripeptides; Venom gland; animals; conotoxins; Conus snail; biological evolution; genetic variation
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Venom diversity and evolution in the most divergent cone snail genus Profundiconus / Fassio, G.; Modica, M. V.; Mary, L.; Zaharias, P.; Fedosov, A. E.; Gorson, J.; Kantor, Y. I.; Holford, M.; Puillandre, N.. - In: TOXINS. - ISSN 2072-6651. - 11:11(2019), p. 623. [10.3390/toxins11110623]
File allegati a questo prodotto
File Dimensione Formato  
Fassio_Venom_2019.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione pubblicata con il layout dell'editore)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 3.74 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
3.74 MB Adobe PDF

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1573132
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 10
  • Scopus 15
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 13
social impact