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Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes

BACKGROUND: Efficient venom delivery systems are known to occur only in varanoid lizards and advanced colubroidean snakes among squamate reptiles. Although components of these venomous systems might have been present in a common ancestor, the two lineages independently evolved strikingly different v...

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Autores principales: Zaher, Hussam, de Oliveira, Leonardo, Grazziotin, Felipe G, Campagner, Michelle, Jared, Carlos, Antoniazzi, Marta M, Prudente, Ana L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4021269/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24661572
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-14-58
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author Zaher, Hussam
de Oliveira, Leonardo
Grazziotin, Felipe G
Campagner, Michelle
Jared, Carlos
Antoniazzi, Marta M
Prudente, Ana L
author_facet Zaher, Hussam
de Oliveira, Leonardo
Grazziotin, Felipe G
Campagner, Michelle
Jared, Carlos
Antoniazzi, Marta M
Prudente, Ana L
author_sort Zaher, Hussam
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Efficient venom delivery systems are known to occur only in varanoid lizards and advanced colubroidean snakes among squamate reptiles. Although components of these venomous systems might have been present in a common ancestor, the two lineages independently evolved strikingly different venom gland systems. In snakes, venom is produced exclusively by serous glands in the upper jaw. Within the colubroidean radiation, lower jaw seromucous infralabial glands are known only in two distinct lineages–the basal pareatids and the more advanced Neotropical dipsadines known as “goo-eating snakes”. Goo-eaters are a highly diversified, ecologically specialized clade that feeds exclusively on invertebrates (e.g., gastropod molluscs and annelids). Their evolutionary success has been attributed to their peculiar feeding strategies, which remain surprisingly poorly understood. More specifically, it has long been thought that the more derived Dipsadini genera Dipsas and Sibynomorphus use glandular toxins secreted by their infralabial glands to extract snails from their shells. RESULTS: Here, we report the presence in the tribe Dipsadini of a novel lower jaw protein-secreting delivery system effected by a gland that is not functionally related to adjacent teeth, but rather opens loosely on the oral epithelium near the tip of the mandible, suggesting that its secretion is not injected into the prey as a form of envenomation but rather helps control the mucus and assists in the ingestion of their highly viscous preys. A similar protein-secreting system is also present in the goo-eating genus Geophis and may share the same adaptive purpose as that hypothesized for Dipsadini. Our phylogenetic hypothesis suggests that the acquisition of a seromucous infralabial gland represents a uniquely derived trait of the goo-eating clade that evolved independently twice within the group as a functionally complex protein-secreting delivery system. CONCLUSIONS: The acquisition by snail-eating snakes of such a complex protein-secreting system suggests that the secretion from the hypertrophied infralabial glands of goo-eating snakes may have a fundamental role in mucus control and prey transport rather than envenomation of prey. Evolution of a functional secretory system that combines a solution for mucus control and transport of viscous preys is here thought to underlie the successful radiation of goo-eating snakes.
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spelling pubmed-40212692014-05-16 Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes Zaher, Hussam de Oliveira, Leonardo Grazziotin, Felipe G Campagner, Michelle Jared, Carlos Antoniazzi, Marta M Prudente, Ana L BMC Evol Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Efficient venom delivery systems are known to occur only in varanoid lizards and advanced colubroidean snakes among squamate reptiles. Although components of these venomous systems might have been present in a common ancestor, the two lineages independently evolved strikingly different venom gland systems. In snakes, venom is produced exclusively by serous glands in the upper jaw. Within the colubroidean radiation, lower jaw seromucous infralabial glands are known only in two distinct lineages–the basal pareatids and the more advanced Neotropical dipsadines known as “goo-eating snakes”. Goo-eaters are a highly diversified, ecologically specialized clade that feeds exclusively on invertebrates (e.g., gastropod molluscs and annelids). Their evolutionary success has been attributed to their peculiar feeding strategies, which remain surprisingly poorly understood. More specifically, it has long been thought that the more derived Dipsadini genera Dipsas and Sibynomorphus use glandular toxins secreted by their infralabial glands to extract snails from their shells. RESULTS: Here, we report the presence in the tribe Dipsadini of a novel lower jaw protein-secreting delivery system effected by a gland that is not functionally related to adjacent teeth, but rather opens loosely on the oral epithelium near the tip of the mandible, suggesting that its secretion is not injected into the prey as a form of envenomation but rather helps control the mucus and assists in the ingestion of their highly viscous preys. A similar protein-secreting system is also present in the goo-eating genus Geophis and may share the same adaptive purpose as that hypothesized for Dipsadini. Our phylogenetic hypothesis suggests that the acquisition of a seromucous infralabial gland represents a uniquely derived trait of the goo-eating clade that evolved independently twice within the group as a functionally complex protein-secreting delivery system. CONCLUSIONS: The acquisition by snail-eating snakes of such a complex protein-secreting system suggests that the secretion from the hypertrophied infralabial glands of goo-eating snakes may have a fundamental role in mucus control and prey transport rather than envenomation of prey. Evolution of a functional secretory system that combines a solution for mucus control and transport of viscous preys is here thought to underlie the successful radiation of goo-eating snakes. BioMed Central 2014-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4021269/ /pubmed/24661572 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-14-58 Text en Copyright © 2014 Zaher et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zaher, Hussam
de Oliveira, Leonardo
Grazziotin, Felipe G
Campagner, Michelle
Jared, Carlos
Antoniazzi, Marta M
Prudente, Ana L
Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
title Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
title_full Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
title_fullStr Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
title_full_unstemmed Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
title_short Consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
title_sort consuming viscous prey: a novel protein-secreting delivery system in neotropical snail-eating snakes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4021269/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24661572
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-14-58
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