The defensive use of cone snail venom is hypothesised to have first arisen in ancestral worm-hunting snails and later repurposed in a compartmentalised venom duct to facilitate the dietary shift to molluscivory and piscivory. Consistent with its placement in a basal lineage, we demonstrate that the venom gland lacked distinct compartmentalisation. Transcriptomics revealed expressed a wide range of structural classes, with inhibitory cysteine knot (ICK)-containing peptides dominating. To better understand the evolution of the venom gland compartmentalisation, we compared to , the earliest diverging species from which a defence-evoked venom has been obtained, and fish-hunting from the subgenus that injects distinct defensive and predatory venoms. These comparisons support the hypothesis that venom gland compartmentalisation arose in worm-hunting species and enabled repurposing of venom peptides to facilitate the dietary shift from vermivory to molluscivory and piscivory in more recently diverged cone snail lineages.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8949452PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14030226DOI Listing

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