AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the SA8 peptide family in sea anemones, focusing on the genomic structure and evolutionary changes in two species: Actinia tenebrosa and Telmatactis stephensoni.
  • Researchers identified multiple SA8 genes and clusters in both sea anemone species, revealing tissue-specific expression patterns and a unique inverted gene associated with venom.
  • Findings indicate that SA8 is a distinct gene family in Actiniarians that has evolved through structural changes, ultimately being integrated into the venom system of T. stephensoni, although its functional activity remains unclear.

Article Abstract

Background: The ShK toxin from Stichodactyla helianthus has established the therapeutic potential of sea anemone venom peptides, but many lineage-specific toxin families in Actiniarians remain uncharacterised. One such peptide family, sea anemone 8 (SA8), is present in all five sea anemone superfamilies. We explored the genomic arrangement and evolution of the SA8 gene family in Actinia tenebrosa and Telmatactis stephensoni, characterised the expression patterns of SA8 sequences, and examined the structure and function of SA8 from the venom of T. stephensoni.

Results: We identified ten SA8-family genes in two clusters and six SA8-family genes in five clusters for T. stephensoni and A. tenebrosa, respectively. Nine SA8 T. stephensoni genes were found in a single cluster, and an SA8 peptide encoded by an inverted SA8 gene from this cluster was recruited to venom. We show that SA8 genes in both species are expressed in a tissue-specific manner and the inverted SA8 gene has a unique tissue distribution. While the functional activity of the SA8 putative toxin encoded by the inverted gene was inconclusive, its tissue localisation is similar to toxins used for predator deterrence. We demonstrate that, although mature SA8 putative toxins have similar cysteine spacing to ShK, SA8 peptides are distinct from ShK peptides based on structure and disulfide connectivity.

Conclusions: Our results provide the first demonstration that SA8 is a unique gene family in Actiniarians, evolving through a variety of structural changes including tandem and proximal gene duplication and an inversion event that together allowed SA8 to be recruited into the venom of T. stephensoni.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10210398PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12915-023-01617-yDOI Listing

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