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Venom of the Annulated Sea Snake Hydrophis cyanocinctus: A Biochemically Simple but Genetically Complex Weapon

Authors :
Jia-Qi Li
Yu Du
Long-Hui Lin
Jin-Geng Lv
Chi-Xian Lin
Hong-Yan Zhao
Jian-Fang Gao
Yan Sun
Xiang Ji
Yan-Fu Qu
Source :
Toxins, Vol 13, Iss 548, p 548 (2021), Toxins, Volume 13, Issue 8
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Given that the venom system in sea snakes has a role in enhancing their secondary adaption to the marine environment, it follows that elucidating the diversity and function of venom toxins will help to understand the adaptive radiation of sea snakes. We performed proteomic and de novo NGS analyses to explore the diversity of venom toxins in the annulated sea snake (Hydrophis cyanocinctus) and estimated the adaptive molecular evolution of the toxin-coding unigenes and the toxicity of the major components. We found three-finger toxins (3-FTxs), phospholipase A2 (PLA2) and cysteine-rich secretory protein (CRISP) in the venom proteome and 59 toxin-coding unigenes belonging to 24 protein families in the venom-gland transcriptome<br />3-FTx and PLA2 were the most abundant families. Nearly half of the toxin-coding unigenes had undergone positive selection. The short- (i.p. 0.09 μg/g) and long-chain neurotoxin (i.p. 0.14 μg/g) presented fairly high toxicity, whereas both basic and acidic PLA2s expressed low toxicity. The toxicity of H. cyanocinctus venom was largely determined by the 3-FTxs. Our data show the venom is used by H. cyanocinctus as a biochemically simple but genetically complex weapon and venom evolution in H. cyanocinctus is presumably driven by natural selection to deal with fast-moving prey and enemies in the marine environment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726651
Volume :
13
Issue :
548
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Toxins
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ef12def1ec5e009579cd00da66620f45