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Molecular systematics of the neotropical scorpion genus Tityus (Buthidae): The historical biogeography and venom antigenic diversity of toxic Venezuelan species

Journal

TOXICON
Volume 55, Issue 2-3, Pages 436-454

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2009.09.011

Keywords

Tityus; Scorpion; Mitochondrial DNA; 16S rRNA; Cytochrome oxidase I; Historical biogeography; Molecular clocks; Venom antigenicity

Funding

  1. Fondo Nacional de Ciencia
  2. Tecnologia e Innovacion [S1-2001000674, PI-2004000385]

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We provide a mitochondrial DNA-based phylogenetic hypothesis for 21 Tityus species collected in Venezuela, Trinidad, Brazil and Panama, including 12 taxa known to be toxic to humans. Our phylogenetic reconstruction is based on 850 nucleotides of the combined cytochrome oxidase subunit I and 16S rRNA genes for most species, and centered on Venezuelan scorpions owing to the detailed taxonomic and biogeographic information available for Tityus in this region. The principal phylogenetic result was the strong support for mtDNA clades representing geographical groupings associated with the Perija mountain range, the Merida Andes, or the central and eastern coastal ranges in Venezuela, suggesting that vicariance has been a potent force in the diversification of local scorpions. Venezuelan Tityus species have been organized by Gonzalez-Sponga into three artificial morphological groups, androcottoides, discrepans, and nematochirus, based on the array of ventral carinae in metasomal segments II-IV. We also incorporated a fourth morphological group (Tityus clathratus), recently documented in Venezuela. Our results do not support the clustering of the species in the androcottoides and discrepans morphological groups, which include the majority of taxa of medical importance, but provided support for the nematochirus species group. T clathratus was found to cluster with the Brazilian T serrulatus and T bahiensis. Divergence times of most clades are consistent with major events in the geological history of northern Venezuela and suggest that many Venezuelan Tityus species formed in the late Miocene and the Pliocene. In turn, we used the Tityus mtDNA phylogeny to determine the potential utility of phylogenetic systematics to predict Tityus venom antigenic reactivity by testing the recognition of T norotientalis, T discrepans, T zulianus, T perijanensis, and T clathratus venoms by anti-T discrepans horse antibodies. Cross-reactivity was significantly higher for the closely related eastern (T nororientalis) and central coastal (T discrepans) species in comparison to the distantly related Andean (T zulianus) and Perija (T perijanensis) species. Reactivity of T clathratus low mol. mass toxic components towards anti-T serrulatus and anti-T. discrepans antivenoms was low, suggesting that venom components produced by the subgenus Archaeotityus (which encompass clathratus species) diverge antigenically from other Tityus scorpions. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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