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The Indian cobra reference genome and transcriptome enables comprehensive identification of venom toxins

Authors :
Meredith Sagolla
Gus A. Wright
Hiroki Shibata
Ying Jiun J. Chen
Dinesh Velayutham
Meng Wu
Rajadurai Chinnasamy Perumal
Ivan Koludarov
Sangeetha Mohan
Kate Senger
Eric Stawiski
Subhra Chaudhuri
Peter Liu
Brendan Faherty
Aju Antony
Kristen Wiley
Rami N. Hannoush
Matthew Jevit
Oommen K. Mathew
Mandumpala Davis Dixon
Arun Zachariah
Ridhi Goel
Leonard D. Goldstein
Guillermo de la Rosa
Terje Raudsepp
Jeremy Stinson
Sajesh Puthenpurackal Krishnankutty
James Ziai
Zora Modrusan
Donald S. Kirkpatrick
Steffen Durinck
Joseph Guillory
Kushal Suryamohan
Megha Muraleedharan
R. Manjunatha Kini
Aakrosh Ratan
Markus S. Schröder
Miriam Baca
Somasekar Seshagiri
Domagoj Vucic
Boney Kuriakose
Derek Vargas
Source :
Nature Genetics
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group US, 2020.

Abstract

Snakebite envenoming is a serious and neglected tropical disease that kills ~100,000 people annually. High-quality, genome-enabled comprehensive characterization of toxin genes will facilitate development of effective humanized recombinant antivenom. We report a de novo near-chromosomal genome assembly of Naja naja, the Indian cobra, a highly venomous, medically important snake. Our assembly has a scaffold N50 of 223.35 Mb, with 19 scaffolds containing 95% of the genome. Of the 23,248 predicted protein-coding genes, 12,346 venom-gland-expressed genes constitute the ‘venom-ome’ and this included 139 genes from 33 toxin families. Among the 139 toxin genes were 19 ‘venom-ome-specific toxins’ (VSTs) that showed venom-gland-specific expression, and these probably encode the minimal core venom effector proteins. Synthetic venom reconstituted through recombinant VST expression will aid in the rapid development of safe and effective synthetic antivenom. Additionally, our genome could serve as a reference for snake genomes, support evolutionary studies and enable venom-driven drug discovery.<br />Analysis of a near-chromosomal genome assembly and transcriptome profiling of the Indian cobra identifies genes expressed in the venom glands. These data should help develop a new antivenom.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15461718 and 10614036
Volume :
52
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d80d077d05737d58c9c7439d92e33f97