4.7 Article

Actinoporin-like Proteins Are Widely Distributed in the Phylum Porifera

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 20, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md20010074

Keywords

Porifera; marine sponge; Haliclona; transcriptomics; actinoporins; pore-forming toxins

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This study reveals that diverse Porifera possess actinoporin-like proteins, which have the ability to bind to and create pores in cellular membranes. While many sponge proteins show sequence similarity to actinoporins, they also exhibit consistency in predicted structure. These findings suggest that Porifera could serve as a novel source for actinoporin-like proteins with potential biotechnological and pharmaceutical applications.
Actinoporins are proteinaceous toxins known for their ability to bind to and create pores in cellular membranes. This quality has generated interest in their potential use as new tools, such as therapeutic immunotoxins. Isolated historically from sea anemones, genes encoding for similar actinoporin-like proteins have since been found in a small number of other animal phyla. Sequencing and de novo assembly of Irish Haliclona transcriptomes indicated that sponges also possess similar genes. An exhaustive analysis of publicly available sequencing data from other sponges showed that this is a potentially widespread feature of the Porifera. While many sponge proteins possess a sequence similarity of 27.70-59.06% to actinoporins, they show consistency in predicted structure. One gene copy from H. indistincta has significant sequence similarity to sea anemone actinoporins and possesses conserved residues associated with the fundamental roles of sphingomyelin recognition, membrane attachment, oligomerization, and pore formation, indicating that it may be an actinoporin. Phylogenetic analyses indicate frequent gene duplication, no distinct clade for sponge-derived proteins, and a stronger signal towards actinoporins than similar proteins from other phyla. Overall, this study provides evidence that a diverse array of Porifera represents a novel source of actinoporin-like proteins which may have biotechnological and pharmaceutical applications.

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