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Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands

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Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands. / Kazandjian, Taline D; Hamilton, Brett R; Robinson, Samuel D et al.
In: BMC Biology, Vol. 20, No. 1, 148, 27.06.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Kazandjian, TD, Hamilton, BR, Robinson, SD, Hall, SR, Bartlett, KE, Rowley, P, Wilkinson, MC, Casewell, NR & Undheim, EAB 2022, 'Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands', BMC Biology, vol. 20, no. 1, 148. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-022-01350-y

APA

Kazandjian, T. D., Hamilton, B. R., Robinson, S. D., Hall, S. R., Bartlett, K. E., Rowley, P., Wilkinson, M. C., Casewell, N. R., & Undheim, E. A. B. (2022). Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands. BMC Biology, 20(1), Article 148. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-022-01350-y

Vancouver

Kazandjian TD, Hamilton BR, Robinson SD, Hall SR, Bartlett KE, Rowley P et al. Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands. BMC Biology. 2022 Jun 27;20(1):148. doi: 10.1186/s12915-022-01350-y

Author

Kazandjian, Taline D ; Hamilton, Brett R ; Robinson, Samuel D et al. / Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands. In: BMC Biology. 2022 ; Vol. 20, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{bd567d4f8c4f4e34aeac12871a82c5c7,
title = "Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Venoms are ecological innovations that have evolved numerous times, on each occasion accompanied by the co-evolution of specialised morphological and behavioural characters for venom production and delivery. The close evolutionary interdependence between these characters is exemplified by animals that control the composition of their secreted venom. This ability depends in part on the production of different toxins in different locations of the venom gland, which was recently documented in venomous snakes. Here, we test the hypothesis that the distinct spatial distributions of toxins in snake venom glands are an adaptation that enables the secretion of venoms with distinct ecological functions.RESULTS: We show that the main defensive and predatory peptide toxins are produced in distinct regions of the venom glands of the black-necked spitting cobra (Naja nigricollis), but these distributions likely reflect developmental effects. Indeed, we detected no significant differences in venom collected via defensive 'spitting' or predatory 'biting' events from the same specimens representing multiple lineages of spitting cobra. We also found the same spatial distribution of toxins in a non-spitting cobra and show that heterogeneous toxin distribution is a feature shared with a viper with primarily predatory venom.CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that heterogeneous distributions of toxins are not an adaptation to controlling venom composition in snakes. Instead, it likely reflects physiological constraints on toxin production by the venom glands, opening avenues for future research on the mechanisms of functional differentiation of populations of protein-secreting cells within adaptive contexts.",
keywords = "Animals, Snake Venoms/chemistry, Snakes",
author = "Kazandjian, {Taline D} and Hamilton, {Brett R} and Robinson, {Samuel D} and Hall, {Steven R} and Bartlett, {Keirah E} and Paul Rowley and Wilkinson, {Mark C} and Casewell, {Nicholas R} and Undheim, {Eivind A B}",
year = "2022",
month = jun,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1186/s12915-022-01350-y",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "BMC Biology",
issn = "1741-7007",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physiological constraints dictate toxin spatial heterogeneity in snake venom glands

AU - Kazandjian, Taline D

AU - Hamilton, Brett R

AU - Robinson, Samuel D

AU - Hall, Steven R

AU - Bartlett, Keirah E

AU - Rowley, Paul

AU - Wilkinson, Mark C

AU - Casewell, Nicholas R

AU - Undheim, Eivind A B

PY - 2022/6/27

Y1 - 2022/6/27

N2 - BACKGROUND: Venoms are ecological innovations that have evolved numerous times, on each occasion accompanied by the co-evolution of specialised morphological and behavioural characters for venom production and delivery. The close evolutionary interdependence between these characters is exemplified by animals that control the composition of their secreted venom. This ability depends in part on the production of different toxins in different locations of the venom gland, which was recently documented in venomous snakes. Here, we test the hypothesis that the distinct spatial distributions of toxins in snake venom glands are an adaptation that enables the secretion of venoms with distinct ecological functions.RESULTS: We show that the main defensive and predatory peptide toxins are produced in distinct regions of the venom glands of the black-necked spitting cobra (Naja nigricollis), but these distributions likely reflect developmental effects. Indeed, we detected no significant differences in venom collected via defensive 'spitting' or predatory 'biting' events from the same specimens representing multiple lineages of spitting cobra. We also found the same spatial distribution of toxins in a non-spitting cobra and show that heterogeneous toxin distribution is a feature shared with a viper with primarily predatory venom.CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that heterogeneous distributions of toxins are not an adaptation to controlling venom composition in snakes. Instead, it likely reflects physiological constraints on toxin production by the venom glands, opening avenues for future research on the mechanisms of functional differentiation of populations of protein-secreting cells within adaptive contexts.

AB - BACKGROUND: Venoms are ecological innovations that have evolved numerous times, on each occasion accompanied by the co-evolution of specialised morphological and behavioural characters for venom production and delivery. The close evolutionary interdependence between these characters is exemplified by animals that control the composition of their secreted venom. This ability depends in part on the production of different toxins in different locations of the venom gland, which was recently documented in venomous snakes. Here, we test the hypothesis that the distinct spatial distributions of toxins in snake venom glands are an adaptation that enables the secretion of venoms with distinct ecological functions.RESULTS: We show that the main defensive and predatory peptide toxins are produced in distinct regions of the venom glands of the black-necked spitting cobra (Naja nigricollis), but these distributions likely reflect developmental effects. Indeed, we detected no significant differences in venom collected via defensive 'spitting' or predatory 'biting' events from the same specimens representing multiple lineages of spitting cobra. We also found the same spatial distribution of toxins in a non-spitting cobra and show that heterogeneous toxin distribution is a feature shared with a viper with primarily predatory venom.CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that heterogeneous distributions of toxins are not an adaptation to controlling venom composition in snakes. Instead, it likely reflects physiological constraints on toxin production by the venom glands, opening avenues for future research on the mechanisms of functional differentiation of populations of protein-secreting cells within adaptive contexts.

KW - Animals

KW - Snake Venoms/chemistry

KW - Snakes

U2 - 10.1186/s12915-022-01350-y

DO - 10.1186/s12915-022-01350-y

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35761243

VL - 20

JO - BMC Biology

JF - BMC Biology

SN - 1741-7007

IS - 1

M1 - 148

ER -