Ancestrally Reconstructed von Willebrand Factor Reveals Evidence for Trench Warfare Coevolution between Opossums and Pit Vipers

Author:

Drabeck Danielle H12,Rucavado Alexandra3,Hingst-Zaher Erika4,Dean Antony1,Jansa Sharon A12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota , 1479 Gortner Ave., St Paul, MN 55108 , USA

2. Bell Museum, University of Minnesota , 1987 Upper Buford Circle, St. Paul, MN 55108 , USA

3. Instituto Clodomiro Picado, Facultad de Microbiología, Universidad de Costa Rica , San José , Costa Rica

4. Museu Biológico, Instituto Butantan , CEP 05503-900 São Paulo, SP , Brazil

Abstract

Abstract Opossums in the tribe Didelphini are resistant to pit viper venoms and are hypothesized to be coevolving with venomous snakes. Specifically, a protein involved in blood clotting (von Willebrand factor [vWF] which is targeted by snake venom C-type lectins [CTLs]) has been found to undergo rapid adaptive evolution in Didelphini. Several unique amino acid changes in vWF could explain their resistance; however, experimental evidence that these changes disrupt binding to venom CTLs was lacking. Furthermore, without explicit testing of ancestral phenotypes to reveal the mode of evolution, the assertion that this system represents an example of coevolution rather than noncoevolutionary adaptation remains unsupported. Using expressed vWF proteins and purified venom CTLs, we quantified binding affinity for vWF proteins from all resistant taxa, their venom-sensitive relatives, and their ancestors. We show that CTL-resistant vWF is present in opossums outside clade Didelphini and likely across a wider swath of opossums (family Didelphidae) than previously thought. Ancestral reconstruction and in vitro testing of vWF phenotypes in a clade of rapidly evolving opossums reveal a pattern consistent with trench warfare coevolution between opossums and their venomous snake prey.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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