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The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection

BACKGROUND: Cnidarians are the most ancient venomous organisms. They store a cocktail of venom proteins inside unique stinging organelles called nematocysts. When a cnidarian encounters chemical and physical cues from a potential threat or prey animal, the nematocyst is triggered and fires a harpoon...

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Autores principales: Americus, Benjamin, Hams, Nicole, Klompen, Anna M. L., Alama-Bermejo, Gema, Lotan, Tamar, Bartholomew, Jerri L., Atkinson, Stephen D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8684318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35003924
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12606
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author Americus, Benjamin
Hams, Nicole
Klompen, Anna M. L.
Alama-Bermejo, Gema
Lotan, Tamar
Bartholomew, Jerri L.
Atkinson, Stephen D.
author_facet Americus, Benjamin
Hams, Nicole
Klompen, Anna M. L.
Alama-Bermejo, Gema
Lotan, Tamar
Bartholomew, Jerri L.
Atkinson, Stephen D.
author_sort Americus, Benjamin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Cnidarians are the most ancient venomous organisms. They store a cocktail of venom proteins inside unique stinging organelles called nematocysts. When a cnidarian encounters chemical and physical cues from a potential threat or prey animal, the nematocyst is triggered and fires a harpoon-like tubule to penetrate and inject venom into the prey. Nematocysts are present in all Cnidaria, including the morphologically simple Myxozoa, which are a speciose group of microscopic, spore-forming, obligate parasites of fish and invertebrates. Rather than predation or defense, myxozoans use nematocysts for adhesion to hosts, but the involvement of venom in this process is poorly understood. Recent work shows some myxozoans have a reduced repertoire of venom-like compounds (VLCs) relative to free-living cnidarians, however the function of these proteins is not known. METHODS: We searched for VLCs in the nematocyst proteome and a time-series infection transcriptome of Ceratonova shasta, a myxozoan parasite of salmonid fish. We used four parallel approaches to detect VLCs: BLAST and HMMER searches to preexisting cnidarian venom datasets, the machine learning tool ToxClassifier, and structural modeling of nematocyst proteomes. Sequences that scored positive by at least three methods were considered VLCs. We then mapped their time-series expressions in the fish host and analyzed their phylogenetic relatedness to sequences from other venomous animals. RESULTS: We identified eight VLCs, all of which have closely related sequences in other myxozoan datasets, suggesting a conserved venom profile across Myxozoa, and an overall reduction in venom diversity relative to free-living cnidarians. Expression of the VLCs over the 3-week fish infection varied considerably: three sequences were most expressed at one day post-exposure in the fish’s gills; whereas expression of the other five VLCs peaked at 21 days post-exposure in the intestines, coinciding with the formation of mature parasite spores with nematocysts. Expression of VLC genes early in infection, prior to the development of nematocysts, suggests venoms in C. shasta have been repurposed to facilitate parasite invasion and proliferation within the host. Molecular phylogenetics suggested some VLCs were inherited from a cnidarian ancestor, whereas others were more closely related to sequences from venomous non-Cnidarian organisms and thus may have gained qualities of venom components via convergent evolution. The presence of VLCs and their differential expression during parasite infection enrich the concept of what functions a “venom” can have and represent targets for designing therapeutics against myxozoan infections.
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spelling pubmed-86843182022-01-06 The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection Americus, Benjamin Hams, Nicole Klompen, Anna M. L. Alama-Bermejo, Gema Lotan, Tamar Bartholomew, Jerri L. Atkinson, Stephen D. PeerJ Bioinformatics BACKGROUND: Cnidarians are the most ancient venomous organisms. They store a cocktail of venom proteins inside unique stinging organelles called nematocysts. When a cnidarian encounters chemical and physical cues from a potential threat or prey animal, the nematocyst is triggered and fires a harpoon-like tubule to penetrate and inject venom into the prey. Nematocysts are present in all Cnidaria, including the morphologically simple Myxozoa, which are a speciose group of microscopic, spore-forming, obligate parasites of fish and invertebrates. Rather than predation or defense, myxozoans use nematocysts for adhesion to hosts, but the involvement of venom in this process is poorly understood. Recent work shows some myxozoans have a reduced repertoire of venom-like compounds (VLCs) relative to free-living cnidarians, however the function of these proteins is not known. METHODS: We searched for VLCs in the nematocyst proteome and a time-series infection transcriptome of Ceratonova shasta, a myxozoan parasite of salmonid fish. We used four parallel approaches to detect VLCs: BLAST and HMMER searches to preexisting cnidarian venom datasets, the machine learning tool ToxClassifier, and structural modeling of nematocyst proteomes. Sequences that scored positive by at least three methods were considered VLCs. We then mapped their time-series expressions in the fish host and analyzed their phylogenetic relatedness to sequences from other venomous animals. RESULTS: We identified eight VLCs, all of which have closely related sequences in other myxozoan datasets, suggesting a conserved venom profile across Myxozoa, and an overall reduction in venom diversity relative to free-living cnidarians. Expression of the VLCs over the 3-week fish infection varied considerably: three sequences were most expressed at one day post-exposure in the fish’s gills; whereas expression of the other five VLCs peaked at 21 days post-exposure in the intestines, coinciding with the formation of mature parasite spores with nematocysts. Expression of VLC genes early in infection, prior to the development of nematocysts, suggests venoms in C. shasta have been repurposed to facilitate parasite invasion and proliferation within the host. Molecular phylogenetics suggested some VLCs were inherited from a cnidarian ancestor, whereas others were more closely related to sequences from venomous non-Cnidarian organisms and thus may have gained qualities of venom components via convergent evolution. The presence of VLCs and their differential expression during parasite infection enrich the concept of what functions a “venom” can have and represent targets for designing therapeutics against myxozoan infections. PeerJ Inc. 2021-12-15 /pmc/articles/PMC8684318/ /pubmed/35003924 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12606 Text en © 2021 Americus et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Bioinformatics
Americus, Benjamin
Hams, Nicole
Klompen, Anna M. L.
Alama-Bermejo, Gema
Lotan, Tamar
Bartholomew, Jerri L.
Atkinson, Stephen D.
The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
title The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
title_full The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
title_fullStr The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
title_full_unstemmed The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
title_short The cnidarian parasite Ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
title_sort cnidarian parasite ceratonova shasta utilizes inherited and recruited venom-like compounds during infection
topic Bioinformatics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8684318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35003924
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12606
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