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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(51): e2214880119, 2022 12 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36508672

ABSTRACT

The complexity of snake venom composition reflects adaptation to the diversity of prey and may be driven at times by a coevolutionary arms race between snakes and venom-resistant prey. However, many snakes are also resistant to their own venom due to serum-borne inhibitors of venom toxins, which raises the question of how snake autoinhibitors maintain their efficacy as venom proteins evolve. To investigate this potential three-way arms race among venom, prey, and autoinhibitors, we have identified and traced the evolutionary origin of serum inhibitors of snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs) in the Western Diamondback rattlesnake Crotalus atrox which possesses the largest known battery of SVMP genes among crotalids examined. We found that C. atrox expresses five members of a Fetuin A-related metalloproteinase inhibitor family but that one family member, FETUA-3, is the major SVMP inhibitor that binds to approximately 20 different C. atrox SVMPs and inhibits activities of all three SVMP classes. We show that the fetua-3 gene arose deep within crotalid evolution before the origin of New World species but, surprisingly, fetua-3 belongs to a different paralog group than previously identified SVMP inhibitors in Asian and South American crotalids. Conversely, the C. atrox FETUA-2 ortholog of previously characterized crotalid SVMP inhibitors shows limited activity against C. atrox SVMPs. These results reveal that there has been a functional evolutionary shift in the major SVMP inhibitor in the C. atrox lineage as the SVMP family expanded and diversified in the Crotalus lineage. This broad-spectrum inhibitor may be of potential therapeutic interest.


Subject(s)
Crotalid Venoms , Toxins, Biological , Animals , Crotalus/genetics , Crotalid Venoms/genetics , Crotalid Venoms/metabolism , Metalloproteases/genetics , Metalloproteases/metabolism , Snake Venoms/metabolism , Toxins, Biological/metabolism
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(20): 10911-10920, 2020 05 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32366667

ABSTRACT

The genetic origins of novelty are a central interest of evolutionary biology. Most new proteins evolve from preexisting proteins but the evolutionary path from ancestral gene to novel protein is challenging to trace, and therefore the requirements for and order of coding sequence changes, expression changes, or gene duplication are not clear. Snake venoms are important novel traits that are comprised of toxins derived from several distinct protein families, but the genomic and evolutionary origins of most venom components are not understood. Here, we have traced the origin and diversification of one prominent family, the snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs) that play key roles in subduing prey in many vipers. Genomic analyses of several rattlesnake (Crotalus) species revealed the SVMP family massively expanded from a single, deeply conserved adam28 disintegrin and metalloproteinase gene, to as many as 31 tandem genes in the Western Diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox) through a number of single gene and multigene duplication events. Furthermore, we identified a series of stepwise intragenic deletions that occurred at different times in the course of gene family expansion and gave rise to the three major classes of secreted SVMP toxins by sequential removal of a membrane-tethering domain, the cysteine-rich domain, and a disintegrin domain, respectively. Finally, we show that gene deletion has further shaped the SVMP complex within rattlesnakes, creating both fusion genes and substantially reduced gene complexes. These results indicate that gene duplication and intragenic deletion played essential roles in the origin and diversification of these novel biochemical weapons.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Crotalus/metabolism , Snake Venoms/genetics , Snake Venoms/metabolism , Animals , Crotalid Venoms/genetics , Crotalid Venoms/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Female , Gene Duplication , Gene Fusion , Metalloproteases/genetics , Metalloproteases/metabolism , Snake Venoms/classification , Toxins, Biological/metabolism
3.
Genes Dev ; 24(18): 2031-42, 2010 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20844014

ABSTRACT

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae protein Nhp6A is a model for the abundant and multifunctional high-mobility group B (HMGB) family of chromatin-associated proteins. Nhp6A binds DNA in vitro without sequence specificity and bends DNA sharply, but its role in chromosome biology is poorly understood. We show by whole-genome chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) and high-resolution whole-genome tiling arrays (ChIP-chip) that Nhp6A is localized to specific regions of chromosomes that include ∼23% of RNA polymerase II promoters. Nhp6A binding functions to stabilize nucleosomes, particularly at the transcription start site of these genes. Both genomic binding and transcript expression studies point to functionally related groups of genes that are bound specifically by Nhp6A and whose transcription is altered by the absence of Nhp6. Genomic analyses of Nhp6A mutants specifically defective in DNA bending reveal a critical role of DNA bending for stabilizing chromatin and coregulation of transcription but not for targeted binding by Nhp6A. We conclude that the chromatin environment, not DNA sequence recognition, localizes Nhp6A binding, and that Nhp6A stabilizes chromatin structure and coregulates transcription.


Subject(s)
Chromatin/metabolism , HMGN Proteins/metabolism , High Mobility Group Proteins/metabolism , Nucleosomes/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Transcription, Genetic , Binding Sites , DNA, Fungal/metabolism , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , HMGN Proteins/genetics , High Mobility Group Proteins/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics
4.
Curr Biol ; 28(7): 1016-1026.e4, 2018 04 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29576471

ABSTRACT

Natural selection is generally expected to favor one form of a given trait within a population. The presence of multiple functional variants of traits involved in activities such as feeding, reproduction, or the defense against predators is relatively uncommon within animal species. The genetic architecture and evolutionary mechanisms underlying the origin and maintenance of such polymorphisms are of special interest. Among rattlesnakes, several instances of the production of biochemically distinct neurotoxic or hemorrhagic venom types within the same species are known. Here, we investigated the genetic basis of this phenomenon in three species and found that neurotoxic and hemorrhagic individuals of the same species possess markedly different haplotypes at two toxin gene complexes. For example, neurotoxic and hemorrhagic Crotalus scutulatus individuals differ by 5 genes at the phospholipase A2 (PLA2) toxin gene complex and by 11 genes at the metalloproteinase (MP) gene complex. A similar set of extremely divergent haplotypes also underlies alternate venom types within C. helleri and C. horridus. We further show that the MP and PLA2 haplotypes of neurotoxic C. helleri appear to have been acquired through hybridization with C. scutulatus-a rare example of the horizontal transfer of a potentially highly adaptive suite of genes. These large structural variants appear analogous to immunity gene complexes in host-pathogen arms races and may reflect the impact of balancing selection at the PLA2 and MP complexes for predation on different prey.


Subject(s)
Crotalid Venoms/genetics , Crotalus/genetics , Haplotypes , Metalloproteases/genetics , Phospholipases A2/genetics , Polymorphism, Genetic , Animals , Crotalid Venoms/classification , Crotalus/classification , Evolution, Molecular , Phenotype , Species Specificity
5.
Curr Biol ; 26(18): 2434-2445, 2016 09 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27641771

ABSTRACT

The genetic origin of novel traits is a central but challenging puzzle in evolutionary biology. Among snakes, phospholipase A2 (PLA2)-related toxins have evolved in different lineages to function as potent neurotoxins, myotoxins, or hemotoxins. Here, we traced the genomic origin and evolution of PLA2 toxins by examining PLA2 gene number, organization, and expression in both neurotoxic and non-neurotoxic rattlesnakes. We found that even though most North American rattlesnakes do not produce neurotoxins, the genes of a specialized heterodimeric neurotoxin predate the origin of rattlesnakes and were present in their last common ancestor (∼22 mya). The neurotoxin genes were then deleted independently in the lineages leading to the Western Diamondback (Crotalus atrox) and Eastern Diamondback (C. adamanteus) rattlesnakes (∼6 mya), while a PLA2 myotoxin gene retained in C. atrox was deleted from the neurotoxic Mojave rattlesnake (C. scutulatus; ∼4 mya). The rapid evolution of PLA2 gene number appears to be due to transposon invasion that provided a template for non-allelic homologous recombination.


Subject(s)
Crotalid Venoms/genetics , Crotalus/genetics , Phospholipases A2/genetics , Reptilian Proteins/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Crotalid Venoms/chemistry , Crotalid Venoms/metabolism , Crotalus/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Phospholipases A2/chemistry , Phospholipases A2/metabolism , Phylogeny , Reptilian Proteins/chemistry , Reptilian Proteins/metabolism , Species Specificity
6.
J Gen Virol ; 86(Pt 4): 1171-1179, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15784911

ABSTRACT

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates can be distinguished by their chemokine coreceptor usage. Non-syncytium-inducing (NSI), macrophage-tropic viruses utilize CCR5 and are called R5 viruses; syncytium-inducing (SI) isolates use CXCR4 and are known as X4 viruses. R5 and X4 HIV isolates are both transmitted but, in most cases, R5 viruses predominate in the blood prior to the development of AIDS-related pathogenesis. The reason for the selective growth of the R5 strain is not known, but could reflect a replication advantage of R5 viruses over X4 viruses in CD4+ cells. To explore this possibility, eight phenotypically distinct viruses were used to infect CD4+ cells and cellular proliferation and activation were evaluated. In unstimulated CD4+ cells, R5 virus isolates increased the level of cell activation compared with X4 virus isolates and uninfected control cells. In CD4+ cells that were stimulated with interleukin 2, both R5 and X4 viruses were found to decrease the level of cell proliferation and reduce the majority of the activation markers studied when compared with uninfected control CD4+ cells from the same donors. However, although equal amounts of CD4+ cells were infected, R5 virus-infected CD4+ cells showed a two- to fourfold increase in cellular proliferation over X4 viruses, as measured by [3H]thymidine incorporation (P=0.001) and nuclear expression of Ki67 (P=0.001). In addition, a larger proportion of CD4+ T cells infected with R5 viruses had significantly higher levels of activation-marker expression (e.g. CD25, CD71 and HLA-DR) than CD4+ T lymphocytes infected with X4 viruses (P<0.02). Taken together, these results indicate that CD4+ cells infected with R5 virus isolates may have a selective advantage over X4 virus-infected CD4+ T cells for survival and, hence, virus spread.


Subject(s)
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/virology , HIV-1/pathogenicity , Lymphocyte Activation , Receptors, CCR5/metabolism , Receptors, CXCR4/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , CD4 Antigens/metabolism , Down-Regulation , HIV Envelope Protein gp120/chemistry , HIV Envelope Protein gp120/genetics , HIV Infections/immunology , HIV Infections/virology , HIV-1/chemistry , HIV-1/genetics , HIV-1/metabolism , Humans , Interleukin-2/pharmacology , Lymphocyte Activation/drug effects , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Peptide Fragments/genetics , Phenotype , Virus Replication
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