AI Article Synopsis

  • Venom peptides from predatory organisms, like conoidean snails, are important for studying evolutionary processes and have potential for biomedical applications.
  • This research focuses on terebrid snails, investigating their venom peptides (teretoxins) using next-generation sequencing, revealing 139 novel peptides and identifying 14 unique gene superfamilies.
  • The findings enhance our understanding of venom diversity and evolution in marine snails and highlight opportunities for further research into gene evolution and drug development.

Article Abstract

Venom peptides from predatory organisms are a resource for investigating evolutionary processes such as adaptive radiation or diversification, and exemplify promising targets for biomedical drug development. Terebridae are an understudied lineage of conoidean snails, which also includes cone snails and turrids. Characterization of cone snail venom peptides, conotoxins, has revealed a cocktail of bioactive compounds used to investigate physiological cellular function, predator-prey interactions, and to develop novel therapeutics. However, venom diversity of other conoidean snails remains poorly understood. The present research applies a venomics approach to characterize novel terebrid venom peptides, teretoxins, from the venom gland transcriptomes of Triplostephanus anilis and Terebra subulata. Next-generation sequencing and de novo assembly identified 139 putative teretoxins that were analyzed for the presence of canonical peptide features as identified in conotoxins. To meet the challenges of de novo assembly, multiple approaches for cross validation of findings were performed to achieve reliable assemblies of venom duct transcriptomes and to obtain a robust portrait of Terebridae venom. Phylogenetic methodology was used to identify 14 teretoxin gene superfamilies for the first time, 13 of which are unique to the Terebridae. Additionally, basic local algorithm search tool homology-based searches to venom-related genes and posttranslational modification enzymes identified a convergence of certain venom proteins, such as actinoporin, commonly found in venoms. This research provides novel insights into venom evolution and recruitment in Conoidean predatory marine snails and identifies a plethora of terebrid venom peptides that can be used to investigate fundamental questions pertaining to gene evolution.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4494067PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evv104DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

venom peptides
16
venom
11
gene evolution
8
predatory marine
8
marine snails
8
conoidean snails
8
terebrid venom
8
novo assembly
8
snails
5
molecular diversity
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!