Phylogenetically diverse diets favor more complex venoms in North American pitvipers

Author:

Holding Matthew L.ORCID,Strickland Jason L.ORCID,Rautsaw Rhett M.ORCID,Hofmann Erich P.ORCID,Mason Andrew J.,Hogan Michael P.ORCID,Nystrom Gunnar S.,Ellsworth Schyler A.ORCID,Colston Timothy J.ORCID,Borja Miguel,Castañeda-Gaytán GamalielORCID,Grünwald Christoph I.,Jones Jason M.ORCID,Freitas-de-Sousa Luciana A.ORCID,Viala Vincent LouisORCID,Margres Mark J.ORCID,Hingst-Zaher ErikaORCID,Junqueira-de-Azevedo Inácio L. M.ORCID,Moura-da-Silva Ana M.ORCID,Grazziotin Felipe G.ORCID,Gibbs H. LisleORCID,Rokyta Darin R.ORCID,Parkinson Christopher L.

Abstract

The role of natural selection in the evolution of trait complexity can be characterized by testing hypothesized links between complex forms and their functions across species. Predatory venoms are composed of multiple proteins that collectively function to incapacitate prey. Venom complexity fluctuates over evolutionary timescales, with apparent increases and decreases in complexity, and yet the causes of this variation are unclear. We tested alternative hypotheses linking venom complexity and ecological sources of selection from diet in the largest clade of front-fanged venomous snakes in North America: the rattlesnakes, copperheads, cantils, and cottonmouths. We generated independent transcriptomic and proteomic measures of venom complexity and collated several natural history studies to quantify dietary variation. We then constructed genome-scale phylogenies for these snakes for comparative analyses. Strikingly, prey phylogenetic diversity was more strongly correlated to venom complexity than was overall prey species diversity, specifically implicating prey species’ divergence, rather than the number of lineages alone, in the evolution of complexity. Prey phylogenetic diversity further predicted transcriptomic complexity of three of the four largest gene families in viper venom, showing that complexity evolution is a concerted response among many independent gene families. We suggest that the phylogenetic diversity of prey measures functionally relevant divergence in the targets of venom, a claim supported by sequence diversity in the coagulation cascade targets of venom. Our results support the general concept that the diversity of species in an ecological community is more important than their overall number in determining evolutionary patterns in predator trait complexity.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo

Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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