4.3 Article

Ancient Diversification of Three-Finger Toxins in Micrurus Coral Snakes

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION
Volume 86, Issue 1, Pages 58-67

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00239-017-9825-5

Keywords

Coral snake; Elapid; Micrurus; Venom; Three-finger toxin; 3FTx

Funding

  1. International Postgraduate Research Scholarship from The University of Queensland

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Coral snakes, most notably the genus Micrurus, are the only terrestrial elapid snakes in the Americas. Elapid venoms are generally known for their potent neurotoxicity which is usually caused by Three-Finger Toxin (3FTx) proteins. These toxins can have a wide array of functions that have been characterized from the venom of other elapids. We examined publicly available sequences from Micrurus 3FTx to show that they belong to 8 monophyletic clades that diverged as deep in the 3FTx phylogenetic tree as the other clades with characterized functions. Functional residues from previously characterized clades of 3FTx are not well conserved in most of the Micrurus toxin clades. We also analyzed the patterns of selection on these toxins and find that they have been diversifying at different rates, with some having undergone extreme diversifying selection. This suggests that Micrurus 3FTx may contain a previously underappreciated functional diversity that has implications for the clinical outcomes of bite victims, the evolution and ecology of the genus, as well as the potential for biodiscovery efforts focusing on these toxins.

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