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134
result(s) for
"Olivera, Baldomero M."
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Characterization of the Conus bullatus genome and its venom-duct transcriptome
by
Bandyopadhyay, Pradip K
,
Olivera, Baldomero M
,
Hu, Hao
in
Amino acids
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Animals
2011
Background
The venomous marine gastropods, cone snails (genus
Conus
), inject prey with a lethal cocktail of conopeptides, small cysteine-rich peptides, each with a high affinity for its molecular target, generally an ion channel, receptor or transporter. Over the last decade, conopeptides have proven indispensable reagents for the study of vertebrate neurotransmission.
Conus bullatus
belongs to a clade of
Conus
species called
Textilia
, whose pharmacology is still poorly characterized. Thus the genomics analyses presented here provide the first step toward a better understanding the enigmatic
Textilia
clade.
Results
We have carried out a sequencing survey of the
Conus bullatus
genome and venom-duct transcriptome. We find that conopeptides are highly expressed within the venom-duct, and describe an
in silico
pipeline for their discovery and characterization using RNA-seq data. We have also carried out low-coverage shotgun sequencing of the genome, and have used these data to determine its size, genome-wide base composition, simple repeat, and mobile element densities.
Conclusions
Our results provide the first global view of venom-duct transcription in any cone snail. A notable feature of
Conus bullatus
venoms is the breadth of A-superfamily peptides expressed in the venom duct, which are unprecedented in their structural diversity. We also find SNP rates within conopeptides are higher compared to the remainder of
C. bullatus
transcriptome, consistent with the hypothesis that conopeptides are under diversifying selection.
Journal Article
Specialized insulin is used for chemical warfare by fish-hunting cone snails
2015
More than 100 species of venomous cone snails (genus Conus ) are highly effective predators of fish. The vast majority of venom components identified and functionally characterized to date are neurotoxins specifically targeted to receptors, ion channels, and transporters in the nervous system of prey, predators, or competitors. Here we describe a venom component targeting energy metabolism, a radically different mechanism. Two fish-hunting cone snails, Conus geographus and Conus tulipa , have evolved specialized insulins that are expressed as major components of their venoms. These insulins are distinctive in having much greater similarity to fish insulins than to the molluscan hormone and are unique in that posttranslational modifications characteristic of conotoxins (hydroxyproline, γ-carboxyglutamate) are present. When injected into fish, the venom insulin elicits hypoglycemic shock, a condition characterized by dangerously low blood glucose. Our evidence suggests that insulin is specifically used as a weapon for prey capture by a subset of fish-hunting cone snails that use a net strategy to capture prey. Insulin appears to be a component of the nirvana cabal, a toxin combination in these venoms that is released into the water to disorient schools of small fish, making them easier to engulf with the snail’s distended false mouth, which functions as a net. If an entire school of fish simultaneously experiences hypoglycemic shock, this should directly facilitate capture by the predatory snail.
Significance The discovery and characterization of insulin, a key hormone of energy metabolism, provided a life-saving drug for diabetics. We show that insulin can be subverted for nefarious biological purposes: Venomous cone snails use specialized insulins to elicit hypoglycemic shock, facilitating capture of their fish prey. This finding extends our understanding of the chemical and functional diversity of venom components, such that the snail’s arsenal includes a diverse set of neurotoxins that alters neuronal circuitry, as well as components that override glucose homeostasis. The highly expressed venom insulins are distinct from molluscan insulins and exhibit remarkable similarity to fish insulins. They are the smallest of all insulins characterized from any source, potentially providing new insights into structure-function elements of insulin action.
Journal Article
Elucidation of the molecular envenomation strategy of the cone snail Conus geographus through transcriptome sequencing of its venom duct
by
Bandyopadhyay, Pradip K
,
Olivera, Baldomero M
,
Hu, Hao
in
Academic libraries
,
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Analysis
2012
Background
The fish-hunting cone snail,
Conus geographus
, is the deadliest snail on earth. In the absence of medical intervention, 70% of human stinging cases are fatal. Although, its venom is known to consist of a cocktail of small peptides targeting different ion-channels and receptors, the bulk of its venom constituents, their sites of manufacture, relative abundances and how they function collectively in envenomation has remained unknown.
Results
We have used transcriptome sequencing to systematically elucidate the contents the
C. geographus
venom duct, dividing it into four segments in order to investigate each segment’s mRNA contents. Three different types of calcium channel (each targeted by unrelated, entirely distinct venom peptides) and at least two different nicotinic receptors appear to be targeted by the venom. Moreover, the most highly expressed venom component is not paralytic, but causes sensory disorientation and is expressed in a different segment of the venom duct from venoms believed to cause sensory disruption. We have also identified several new toxins of interest for pharmaceutical and neuroscience research.
Conclusions
Conus geographus
is believed to prey on fish hiding in reef crevices at night. Our data suggest that disorientation of prey is central to its envenomation strategy. Furthermore, venom expression profiles also suggest a sophisticated layering of venom-expression patterns within the venom duct, with disorientating and paralytic venoms expressed in different regions. Thus, our transcriptome analysis provides a new physiological framework for understanding the molecular envenomation strategy of this deadly snail.
Journal Article
Conotoxin kM-RIIIJ reveals interplay between Kv1-channels and persistent sodium currents in proprioceptive DRG neurons
2024
Voltage-gated potassium channels (VGKCs) comprise the largest and most complex families of ion channels. Approximately 70 genes encode VGKC alpha subunits, which assemble into functional tetrameric channel complexes. These subunits can also combine to form heteromeric channels, significantly expanding the potential diversity of VGKCs. The functional expression and physiological role of heteromeric K-channels have remained largely unexplored due to the lack of tools to probe their functions. Conotoxins, from predatory cone snails, have high affinity and specificity for heteromeric combinations of K-channels and show great promise for defining their physiological roles. In this work, using conotoxin
k
M-RIIIJ as a pharmacological probe, we explore the expression and physiological functions of heteromeric K
v
1.2 channels using constellation pharmacology platform. We report that heteromers of K
v
1.2/1.1 are highly expressed in proprioceptive neurons found in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG). Inhibition of K
v
1.2/1.1 heteromers leads to an influx of calcium ions, suggesting that these channels regulate neuronal excitability. We also present evidence that K
v
1.2/1.1 heteromers counteract persistent sodium currents, and that inhibiting these channels leads to tonic firing of action potentials. Additionally,
k
M-RIIIJ impaired proprioception in mice, uncovering a previously unrecognized physiological function of heteromeric K
v
1.2/1.1 channels in proprioceptive sensory neurons of the DRG.
Journal Article
Molecular determinants of μ-conotoxin KIIIA interaction with the human voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.7
by
Kimball, Ian H.
,
Sack, Jon T.
,
Nguyen, Phuong T.
in
Cardiac arrhythmia
,
Channel gating
,
Computer applications
2023
The voltage-gated sodium (Na V ) channel subtype Na V 1.7 plays a critical role in pain signaling, making it an important drug target. Here we studied the molecular interactions between μ-Conotoxin KIIIA (KIIIA) and the human Na V 1.7 channel (hNa V 1.7). We developed a structural model of hNa V 1.7 using Rosetta computational modeling and performed in silico docking of KIIIA using RosettaDock to predict residues forming specific pairwise contacts between KIIIA and hNa V 1.7. We experimentally validated these contacts using mutant cycle analysis. Comparison between our KIIIA-hNa V 1.7 model and the cryo-EM structure of KIIIA-hNa V 1.2 revealed key similarities and differences between Na V channel subtypes with potential implications for the molecular mechanism of toxin block. The accuracy of our integrative approach, combining structural data with computational modeling, experimental validation, and molecular dynamics simulations, suggests that Rosetta structural predictions will be useful for rational design of novel biologics targeting specific Na V channels.
Journal Article
Venom Insulins of Cone Snails Diversify Rapidly and Track Prey Taxa
2016
A specialized insulin was recently found in the venom of a fish-hunting cone snail, Conus geographus. Here we show that many worm-hunting and snail-hunting cones also express venom insulins, and that this novel gene family has diversified explosively. Cone snails express a highly conserved insulin in their nerve ring; presumably this conventional signaling insulin is finely tuned to the Conus insulin receptor, which also evolves very slowly. By contrast, the venom insulins diverge rapidly, apparently in response to biotic interactions with prey and also possibly the cones’ own predators and competitors. Thus, the inwardly directed signaling insulins appear to experience predominantly purifying sele\\ction to target an internal receptor that seldom changes, while the outwardly directed venom insulins frequently experience directional selection to target heterospecific insulin receptors in a changing mix of prey, predators and competitors. Prey insulin receptors may often be constrained in ways that prevent their evolutionary escape from targeted venom insulins, if amino-acid substitutions that result in escape also degrade the receptor’s signaling functions.
Journal Article
Fish-hunting cone snail disrupts prey’s glucose homeostasis with weaponized mimetics of somatostatin and insulin
by
Koch, Thomas Lund
,
Bjørn-Yoshimoto, Walden E.
,
Schjoldager, Katrine T.
in
13/95
,
631/181/2476
,
631/443/319/1557
2024
Venomous animals have evolved diverse molecular mechanisms to incapacitate prey and defend against predators. Most venom components disrupt nervous, locomotor, and cardiovascular systems or cause tissue damage. The discovery that certain fish-hunting cone snails use weaponized insulins to induce hypoglycemic shock in prey highlights a unique example of toxins targeting glucose homeostasis. Here, we show that, in addition to insulins, the deadly fish hunter,
Conus geographus
, uses a selective somatostatin receptor 2 (SSTR
2
) agonist that blocks the release of the insulin-counteracting hormone glucagon, thereby exacerbating insulin-induced hypoglycemia in prey. The native toxin, Consomatin nG1, exists in several proteoforms with a minimized vertebrate somatostatin-like core motif connected to a heavily glycosylated N-terminal region. We demonstrate that the toxin’s N-terminal tail closely mimics a glycosylated somatostatin from fish pancreas and is crucial for activating the fish SSTR
2
. Collectively, these findings provide a stunning example of chemical mimicry, highlight the combinatorial nature of venom components, and establish glucose homeostasis as an effective target for prey capture.
Venomous animals typically disrupt nervous, locomotor, and cardiovascular systems to incapacitate prey, but certain fish-hunting cone snails evolved toxins that specifically target glucose homeostasis. Here, the authors show the combinatorial nature of weaponized insulin and somatostatin mimetics, exemplifying the use of combinatorial chemical mimicry for prey capture.
Journal Article
Elucidation of Medusozoan (Jellyfish) Venom Constituent Activities Using Constellation Pharmacology
by
Hurwitz, Kikiana
,
Espino, Samuel S.
,
Raghuraman, Shrinivasan
in
Animals
,
Biological activity
,
Biomedical materials
2024
Within the phylum Cnidaria, sea anemones (class Anthozoa) express a rich diversity of ion-channel peptide modulators with biomedical applications, but corollary discoveries from jellyfish (subphylum Medusozoa) are lacking. To bridge this gap, bioactivities of previously unexplored proteinaceous and small molecular weight (~15 kDa to 5 kDa) venom components were assessed in a mouse dorsal root ganglia (DRG) high-content calcium-imaging assay, known as constellation pharmacology. While the addition of crude venom led to nonspecific cell death and Fura-2 signal leakage due to pore-forming activity, purified small molecular weight fractions of venom demonstrated three main, concentration-dependent and reversible effects on defined heterogeneous cell types found in the primary cultures of mouse DRG. These three phenotypic responses are herein referred to as phenotype A, B and C: excitatory amplification (A) or inhibition (B) of KCl-induced calcium signals, and test compound-induced disturbances to baseline calcium levels (C). Most notably, certain Alatina alata venom fractions showed phenotype A effects in all DRG neurons; Physalia physalis and Chironex fleckeri fractions predominantly showed phenotype B effects in small- and medium-diameter neurons. Finally, specific Physalia physalis and Alatina alata venom components induced direct excitatory responses (phenotype C) in glial cells. These findings demonstrate a diversity of neuroactive compounds in jellyfish venom potentially targeting a constellation of ion channels and ligand-gated receptors with broad physiological implications.
Journal Article
Rapid expansion of the protein disulfide isomerase gene family facilitates the folding of venom peptides
by
Li, Qing
,
Gruber, Christian W.
,
Jackson, Ronneshia L.
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animals
,
Biochemistry
2016
Formation of correct disulfide bonds in the endoplasmic reticulum is a crucial step for folding proteins destined for secretion. Protein disulfide isomerases (PDIs) play a central role in this process. We report a previously unidentified, hypervariable family of PDIs that represents the most diverse gene family of oxidoreductases described in a single genus to date. These enzymes are highly expressed specifically in the venom glands of predatory cone snails, animals that synthesize a remarkably diverse set of cysteine-rich peptide toxins (conotoxins). Enzymes in this PDI family, termed conotoxin-specific PDIs, significantly and differentially accelerate the kinetics of disulfide-bond formation of several conotoxins. Our results are consistent with a unique biological scenario associated with protein folding: The diversification of a family of foldases can be correlated with the rapid evolution of an unprecedented diversity of disulfiderich structural domains expressed by venomous marine snails in the superfamily Conoidea.
Journal Article
Metabolic model for diversity-generating biosynthesis
by
McIntosh, John A.
,
Maschek, J. Alan
,
Tianero, Ma. Diarey
in
Biochemistry
,
Biological Sciences
,
Biosynthesis
2016
A conventional metabolic pathway leads to a specific product. In stark contrast, there are diversity-generating metabolic pathways that naturally produce different chemicals, sometimes of great diversity. We demonstrate that for one such pathway, tru, each ensuing metabolic step is slower, in parallel with the increasing potential chemical divergence generated as the pathway proceeds. Intermediates are long lived and accumulate progressively, in contrast with conventional metabolic pathways, in which the first step is rate-limiting and metabolic intermediates are short-lived. Understanding these fundamental differences enables several different practical applications, such as combinatorial biosynthesis, some of which we demonstrate here. We propose that these principles may provide a unifying framework underlying diversity-generating metabolism in many different biosynthetic pathways.
Journal Article