Phylogenomics of Scorpions Reveal Contemporaneous Diversification of Scorpion Mammalian Predators and Mammal-Active Sodium Channel Toxins

Author:

Santibáñez-López Carlos E12ORCID,Aharon Shlomi3ORCID,Ballesteros Jesús A1ORCID,Gainett Guilherme1ORCID,Baker Caitlin M14ORCID,González-Santillán Edmundo5ORCID,Harvey Mark S6ORCID,Hassan Mohamed K7ORCID,Abu Almaaty Ali Hussein7ORCID,Aldeyarbi Shorouk Mohamed7ORCID,Monod Lionel8ORCID,Ojanguren-Affilastro Andrés9ORCID,Pinto-da-Rocha Ricardo10ORCID,Zvik Yoram11ORCID,Gavish-Regev Efrat3ORCID,Sharma Prashant P1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin–Madison , Madison, WI 53706, USA

2. Department of Biology, Western Connecticut State University , 181 White Street, Danbury, CT 06810, USA

3. National Natural History Collections, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem , 91904 Jerusalem, Israel

4. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

5. Colección Nacional de Arácnidos, Instituto de Biología , Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 3er Circuito s/n Ciudad Universitaria, Alcaldía Coyoacán, C.P. 04510 Mexico city, Mexico

6. Department of Terrestrial Zoology, Western Australian Museum, Locked Bag 49 , Welshpool DC 6986, Western Australia, Australia

7. Zoology Department, Faculty of Science, Port Said University , Port Fouad, Egypt

8. Deípartement des arthropodes et d’entomologie I , Museíum d’histoire naturelle, Route de Malagnou 1, 1208 Geneva, Switzerland

9. División Arachnología, Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales , Av. Aíngel Gallardo 470, C1405DJR Buenos Aires, Argentina

10. Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo , Rua do Matão, travessa 14, 321, São Paulo, Cep: 05508-900, Brazil

11. Hoopoe Ornithology & Ecology Center, Yeroham, Israel & Ben-Gurion University of the Negev , 8410501 Be’er-Sheva, Israel

Abstract

Abstract Scorpions constitute a charismatic lineage of arthropods and comprise more than 2500 described species. Found throughout various tropical and temperate habitats, these predatory arachnids have a long evolutionary history, with a fossil record that began in the Silurian. While all scorpions are venomous, the asymmetrically diverse family Buthidae harbors nearly half the diversity of extant scorpions, and all but one of the 58 species that are medically significant to humans. However, the lack of a densely sampled scorpion phylogeny has hindered broader inferences of the diversification dynamics of scorpion toxins. To redress this gap, we assembled a phylogenomic data set of 100 scorpion venom gland transcriptomes and genomes, emphasizing the sampling of highly toxic buthid genera. To infer divergence times of venom gene families, we applied a phylogenomic node dating approach for the species tree in tandem with phylostratigraphic bracketing to estimate the minimum ages of mammal-specific toxins. Our analyses establish a robustly supported phylogeny of scorpions, particularly with regard to relationships between medically significant taxa. Analysis of venom gene families shows that mammal-active sodium channel toxins (NaTx) have independently evolved in five lineages within Buthidae. Temporal windows of mammal-targeting toxin origins are correlated with the basal diversification of major scorpion mammal predators such as shrews, bats, and rodents. These results suggest an evolutionary model of relatively recent diversification of buthid NaTx homologs in response to the diversification of scorpion predators. [Adaptation; arachnids; phylogenomic dating; phylostratigraphy; venom.]

Funder

National Science Foundation

National Geographic Society Expeditions Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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