Reconstructing the Origins of the Somatostatin and Allatostatin-C Signaling Systems Using the Accelerated Evolution of Biodiverse Cone Snail Toxins

Author:

Koch Thomas Lund1,Ramiro Iris Bea L.1,Flórez Salcedo Paula2,Engholm Ebbe13,Jensen Knud Jørgen3,Chase Kevin4,Olivera Baldomero M.4,Bjørn-Yoshimoto Walden Emil1,Safavi-Hemami Helena145

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen-N 2200, Denmark

2. Department of Neurobiology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA

3. Department of Chemistry, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg 1871, Denmark

4. School of Biological Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA

5. Department of Biochemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA

Abstract

Abstract Somatostatin and its related peptides (SSRPs) form an important family of hormones with diverse physiological roles. The ubiquitous presence of SSRPs in vertebrates and several invertebrate deuterostomes suggests an ancient origin of the SSRP signaling system. However, the existence of SSRP genes outside of deuterostomes has not been established, and the evolutionary history of this signaling system remains poorly understood. Our recent discovery of SSRP-like toxins (consomatins) in venomous marine cone snails (Conus) suggested the presence of a related signaling system in mollusks and potentially other protostomes. Here, we identify the molluscan SSRP-like signaling gene that gave rise to the consomatin family. Following recruitment into venom, consomatin genes experienced strong positive selection and repeated gene duplications resulting in the formation of a hyperdiverse family of venom peptides. Intriguingly, the largest number of consomatins was found in worm-hunting species (>400 sequences), indicating a homologous system in annelids, another large protostome phylum. Consistent with this, comprehensive sequence mining enabled the identification of SSRP-like sequences (and their corresponding orphan receptor) in annelids and several other protostome phyla. These results established the existence of SSRP-like peptides in many major branches of bilaterians and challenge the prevailing hypothesis that deuterostome SSRPs and protostome allatostatin-C are orthologous peptide families. Finally, having a large set of predator–prey SSRP sequences available, we show that although the cone snail’s signaling SSRP-like genes are under purifying selection, the venom consomatin genes experience rapid directional selection to target receptors in a changing mix of prey.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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