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Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes

Silk spinning is essential to spider ecology and has had a key role in the expansive diversification of spiders. Silk is composed primarily of proteins called spidroins, which are encoded by a multi-gene family. Spidroins have been studied extensively in the derived clade, Orbiculariae (orb-weavers)...

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Autores principales: Starrett, James, Garb, Jessica E., Kuelbs, Amanda, Azubuike, Ugochi O., Hayashi, Cheryl Y.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3382249/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22761664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038084
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author Starrett, James
Garb, Jessica E.
Kuelbs, Amanda
Azubuike, Ugochi O.
Hayashi, Cheryl Y.
author_facet Starrett, James
Garb, Jessica E.
Kuelbs, Amanda
Azubuike, Ugochi O.
Hayashi, Cheryl Y.
author_sort Starrett, James
collection PubMed
description Silk spinning is essential to spider ecology and has had a key role in the expansive diversification of spiders. Silk is composed primarily of proteins called spidroins, which are encoded by a multi-gene family. Spidroins have been studied extensively in the derived clade, Orbiculariae (orb-weavers), from the suborder Araneomorphae (‘true spiders’). Orbicularians produce a suite of different silks, and underlying this repertoire is a history of duplication and spidroin gene divergence. A second class of silk proteins, Egg Case Proteins (ECPs), is known only from the orbicularian species, Lactrodectus hesperus (Western black widow). In L. hesperus, ECPs bond with tubuliform spidroins to form egg case silk fibers. Because most of the phylogenetic diversity of spiders has not been sampled for their silk genes, there is limited understanding of spidroin gene family history and the prevalence of ECPs. Silk genes have not been reported from the suborder Mesothelae (segmented spiders), which diverged from all other spiders >380 million years ago, and sampling from Mygalomorphae (tarantulas, trapdoor spiders) and basal araneomorph lineages is sparse. In comparison to orbicularians, mesotheles and mygalomorphs have a simpler silk biology and thus are hypothesized to have less diversity of silk genes. Here, we present cDNAs synthesized from the silk glands of six mygalomorph species, a mesothele, and a non-orbicularian araneomorph, and uncover a surprisingly rich silk gene diversity. In particular, we find ECP homologs in the mesothele, suggesting that ECPs were present in the common ancestor of extant spiders, and originally were not specialized to complex with tubuliform spidroins. Furthermore, gene-tree/species-tree reconciliation analysis reveals that numerous spidroin gene duplications occurred after the split between Mesothelae and Opisthothelae (Mygalomorphae plus Araneomorphae). We use the spidroin gene tree to reconstruct the evolution of amino acid compositions of spidroins that perform different ecological functions.
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spelling pubmed-33822492012-07-03 Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes Starrett, James Garb, Jessica E. Kuelbs, Amanda Azubuike, Ugochi O. Hayashi, Cheryl Y. PLoS One Research Article Silk spinning is essential to spider ecology and has had a key role in the expansive diversification of spiders. Silk is composed primarily of proteins called spidroins, which are encoded by a multi-gene family. Spidroins have been studied extensively in the derived clade, Orbiculariae (orb-weavers), from the suborder Araneomorphae (‘true spiders’). Orbicularians produce a suite of different silks, and underlying this repertoire is a history of duplication and spidroin gene divergence. A second class of silk proteins, Egg Case Proteins (ECPs), is known only from the orbicularian species, Lactrodectus hesperus (Western black widow). In L. hesperus, ECPs bond with tubuliform spidroins to form egg case silk fibers. Because most of the phylogenetic diversity of spiders has not been sampled for their silk genes, there is limited understanding of spidroin gene family history and the prevalence of ECPs. Silk genes have not been reported from the suborder Mesothelae (segmented spiders), which diverged from all other spiders >380 million years ago, and sampling from Mygalomorphae (tarantulas, trapdoor spiders) and basal araneomorph lineages is sparse. In comparison to orbicularians, mesotheles and mygalomorphs have a simpler silk biology and thus are hypothesized to have less diversity of silk genes. Here, we present cDNAs synthesized from the silk glands of six mygalomorph species, a mesothele, and a non-orbicularian araneomorph, and uncover a surprisingly rich silk gene diversity. In particular, we find ECP homologs in the mesothele, suggesting that ECPs were present in the common ancestor of extant spiders, and originally were not specialized to complex with tubuliform spidroins. Furthermore, gene-tree/species-tree reconciliation analysis reveals that numerous spidroin gene duplications occurred after the split between Mesothelae and Opisthothelae (Mygalomorphae plus Araneomorphae). We use the spidroin gene tree to reconstruct the evolution of amino acid compositions of spidroins that perform different ecological functions. Public Library of Science 2012-06-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3382249/ /pubmed/22761664 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038084 Text en Starrett et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Starrett, James
Garb, Jessica E.
Kuelbs, Amanda
Azubuike, Ugochi O.
Hayashi, Cheryl Y.
Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes
title Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes
title_full Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes
title_fullStr Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes
title_full_unstemmed Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes
title_short Early Events in the Evolution of Spider Silk Genes
title_sort early events in the evolution of spider silk genes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3382249/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22761664
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0038084
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