Venomics of new world pit vipers: genus-wide comparisons of venom proteomes across Agkistrodon
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Date
Authors
Lomonte, Bruno
Tsai, Wan-Chih
Ureña Diaz, Juan M.
Sanz, Libia
Mora Obando, Diana
Sánchez, Elda
Fry, Bryan G.
Gutiérrez, José María
Gibbs, H. Lisle
Sovic, Michael G.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Proteomics vol 96, p.103-116
Abstract
Wereport a genus-wide comparison of venomproteomevariation acrossNewWorld pit vipers in the genus Agkistrodon. Despite the wide variety of habitats occupied by this genus and that all its taxa feed on diverse species of vertebrates and invertebrate prey, the venom proteomes of copperheads, cottonmouths, and cantils are remarkably similar, both in the type and relative abundance of their different toxin families. The venoms from all the eleven species and subspecies sampled showed relatively similar proteolytic and PLA2 activities. In contrast, quantitative differences were observed in hemorrhagic and myotoxic activities in mice. The highest myotoxic activity was observed with the venoms of A. b. bilineatus, followed by A. p. piscivorus, whereas the venoms of A. c. contortrix and A. p. leucostoma induced the lowest myotoxic activity. The venom of Agkistrodon bilineatus showed the highest hemorrhagic activity and A. c. contortrix the lowest. Compositional and toxicological analyses agree with clinical observations of envenomations by Agkistrodon in the USA and Central America. A comparative analysis of Agkistrodon shows that venom divergence tracks phylogeny of this genus to a greater extent than in Sistrurus rattlesnakes, suggesting that the distinct natural histories of Agkistrodon and Sistrurus clades may have played a key role in molding the patterns of evolution of their venom protein genes.
Description
artículo (arbitrado) -- Universidad de Costa Rica. Instituto de Investigaciones Clodomiro Picado, 2013. Este documento es privado debido a limitaciones de derechos de autor.
Keywords
Snake venom, Veneno de serpiente, Venomics, Sustancia peligrosa
Citation
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1874391913005514