Abstract

Predatory gastropods of the superfamily Conoidea number over 12,000 living species. The evolutionary success of this lineage can be explained by the ability of conoideans to produce complex venoms for hunting, defense, and competitive interactions. Whereas venoms of cone snails (family Conidae) have become increasingly well studied, the venoms of most other conoidean lineages remain largely uncharacterized. In the present study, we present the venom gland transcriptomes of two species of the genus Clavus that belong to the family Drilliidae. Venom gland transcriptomes of two specimens of Clavus canalicularis and two specimens of Clavus davidgilmouri were analyzed, leading to the identification of a total of 1,176 putative venom peptide toxins (drillipeptides). Based on the combined evidence of secretion signal sequence identity, entire precursor similarity search (BLAST), and the orthology inference, putative Clavus toxins were assigned to 158 different gene families. The majority of identified transcripts comprise signal, pro-, mature peptide, and post-regions, with a typically short (<50 amino acids) and cysteine-rich mature peptide region. Thus, drillipeptides are structurally similar to conotoxins. However, convincing homology with known groups of Conus toxins was only detected for very few toxin families. Among these are Clavus counterparts of Conus venom insulins (drillinsulins), porins (drilliporins), and highly diversified lectins (drillilectins). The short size of most drillipeptides and structural similarity to conotoxins were unexpected, given that most related conoidean gastropod families (Terebridae and Turridae) possess longer mature peptide regions. Our findings indicate that, similar to conotoxins, drillipeptides may represent a valuable resource for future pharmacological exploration.

Highlights

  • The predatory gastropods of the superfamily Conoidea J

  • In this study we present a comprehensive survey of the venom gland transcriptomes of two species of the genus Clavus Montfort, 1810, which belongs to the family Drilliidae Olsson, 1964, one of the major conoidean families whose venoms are uncharacterized

  • The venom gland transcriptomes of previously unstudied predatory gastropods of the genus Clavus demonstrates unique biochemical features: displaying a diversity of gene families unparallelled among conoideans, most of which do not show similarity to known toxin families

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Summary

Introduction

The predatory gastropods of the superfamily Conoidea J. Venom peptides from over 300 species of cone snails have been characterized using various approaches (Puillandre et al 2016; Phuong et al 2018, 2019), establishing Conus venoms as an excellent model system for studying molecular evolution in venomous marine animals. Given their unique diversity and selectivity profile, cone snail venom peptides have become indispensable pharmacological probes and have been developed as drugs and drug leads for pain, epilepsy, diabetes and stroke (Prashanth et al 2014, Safavi-Hemami et al 2019; Balsara et al 2015; Jimenez et al 2002; Robinson & SafaviHemami 2017)

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