4.7 Article

A phylogeny-aware approach reveals unexpected venom components in divergent lineages of cone snails

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.1017

Keywords

conotoxins; venom evolution; phylogeny; Conidae; Conasprella; Pygmaeconus

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [19-74-10020]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [865101]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [865101] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
  4. Russian Science Foundation [19-74-10020] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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The research involved comprehensive venom transcriptomic profiling of Conasprella and Pygmaeconus, identifying shared toxin clusters among the analyzed genera. A total of 116 and 98 putative toxins representing 29 and 28 toxin gene superfamilies were found in Conasprella and Pygmaeconus, respectively. The study also unexpectedly detected rare toxin gene superfamilies outside of Conus, showing their ubiquitous distribution across Conidae with high expression levels.
Marine gastropods of the genus Conus are renowned for their remarkable diversity and deadly venoms. While Conus venoms are increasingly well studied for their biomedical applications, we know surprisingly little about venom composition in other lineages of Conidae. We performed comprehensive venom transcriptomic profiling for Conasprella coriolisi and Pygmaeconus traillii, first time for both respective genera. We complemented reference-based transcriptome annotation by a de novo toxin prediction guided by phylogeny, which involved transcriptomic data on two additional 'divergent' cone snail lineages, Profundiconus, and Californiconus. We identified toxin clusters (SSCs) shared among all or some of the four analysed genera based on the identity of the signal region-a molecular tag present in toxins. In total, 116 and 98 putative toxins represent 29 and 28 toxin gene superfamilies in Conasprella and Pygmaeconus, respectively; about quarter of these only found by semi-manual annotation of the SSCs. Two rare gene superfamilies, originally identified from fish-hunting cone snails, were detected outside Conus rather unexpectedly, so we further investigated their distribution across Conidae radiation. We demonstrate that both these, in fact, are ubiquitous in Conidae, sometimes with extremely high expression. Our findings demonstrate how a phylogeny-aware approach circumvents methodological caveats of similarity-based transcriptome annotation.

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