Cargando…
Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research
Venoms have evolved >100 times in all major animal groups, and their components, known as toxins, have been fine-tuned over millions of years into highly effective biochemical weapons. There are many outstanding questions on the evolution of toxin arsenals, such as how venom genes originate, how...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Oxford University Press
2022
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9155608/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35640874 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giac048 |
_version_ | 1784718274408218624 |
---|---|
author | von Reumont, Bjoern M Anderluh, Gregor Antunes, Agostinho Ayvazyan, Naira Beis, Dimitris Caliskan, Figen Crnković, Ana Damm, Maik Dutertre, Sebastien Ellgaard, Lars Gajski, Goran German, Hannah Halassy, Beata Hempel, Benjamin-Florian Hucho, Tim Igci, Nasit Ikonomopoulou, Maria P Karbat, Izhar Klapa, Maria I Koludarov, Ivan Kool, Jeroen Lüddecke, Tim Ben Mansour, Riadh Vittoria Modica, Maria Moran, Yehu Nalbantsoy, Ayse Ibáñez, María Eugenia Pachón Panagiotopoulos, Alexios Reuveny, Eitan Céspedes, Javier Sánchez Sombke, Andy Surm, Joachim M Undheim, Eivind A B Verdes, Aida Zancolli, Giulia |
author_facet | von Reumont, Bjoern M Anderluh, Gregor Antunes, Agostinho Ayvazyan, Naira Beis, Dimitris Caliskan, Figen Crnković, Ana Damm, Maik Dutertre, Sebastien Ellgaard, Lars Gajski, Goran German, Hannah Halassy, Beata Hempel, Benjamin-Florian Hucho, Tim Igci, Nasit Ikonomopoulou, Maria P Karbat, Izhar Klapa, Maria I Koludarov, Ivan Kool, Jeroen Lüddecke, Tim Ben Mansour, Riadh Vittoria Modica, Maria Moran, Yehu Nalbantsoy, Ayse Ibáñez, María Eugenia Pachón Panagiotopoulos, Alexios Reuveny, Eitan Céspedes, Javier Sánchez Sombke, Andy Surm, Joachim M Undheim, Eivind A B Verdes, Aida Zancolli, Giulia |
author_sort | von Reumont, Bjoern M |
collection | PubMed |
description | Venoms have evolved >100 times in all major animal groups, and their components, known as toxins, have been fine-tuned over millions of years into highly effective biochemical weapons. There are many outstanding questions on the evolution of toxin arsenals, such as how venom genes originate, how venom contributes to the fitness of venomous species, and which modifications at the genomic, transcriptomic, and protein level drive their evolution. These questions have received particularly little attention outside of snakes, cone snails, spiders, and scorpions. Venom compounds have further become a source of inspiration for translational research using their diverse bioactivities for various applications. We highlight here recent advances and new strategies in modern venomics and discuss how recent technological innovations and multi-omic methods dramatically improve research on venomous animals. The study of genomes and their modifications through CRISPR and knockdown technologies will increase our understanding of how toxins evolve and which functions they have in the different ontogenetic stages during the development of venomous animals. Mass spectrometry imaging combined with spatial transcriptomics, in situ hybridization techniques, and modern computer tomography gives us further insights into the spatial distribution of toxins in the venom system and the function of the venom apparatus. All these evolutionary and biological insights contribute to more efficiently identify venom compounds, which can then be synthesized or produced in adapted expression systems to test their bioactivity. Finally, we critically discuss recent agrochemical, pharmaceutical, therapeutic, and diagnostic (so-called translational) aspects of venoms from which humans benefit. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-9155608 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2022 |
publisher | Oxford University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-91556082022-06-04 Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research von Reumont, Bjoern M Anderluh, Gregor Antunes, Agostinho Ayvazyan, Naira Beis, Dimitris Caliskan, Figen Crnković, Ana Damm, Maik Dutertre, Sebastien Ellgaard, Lars Gajski, Goran German, Hannah Halassy, Beata Hempel, Benjamin-Florian Hucho, Tim Igci, Nasit Ikonomopoulou, Maria P Karbat, Izhar Klapa, Maria I Koludarov, Ivan Kool, Jeroen Lüddecke, Tim Ben Mansour, Riadh Vittoria Modica, Maria Moran, Yehu Nalbantsoy, Ayse Ibáñez, María Eugenia Pachón Panagiotopoulos, Alexios Reuveny, Eitan Céspedes, Javier Sánchez Sombke, Andy Surm, Joachim M Undheim, Eivind A B Verdes, Aida Zancolli, Giulia Gigascience Review Venoms have evolved >100 times in all major animal groups, and their components, known as toxins, have been fine-tuned over millions of years into highly effective biochemical weapons. There are many outstanding questions on the evolution of toxin arsenals, such as how venom genes originate, how venom contributes to the fitness of venomous species, and which modifications at the genomic, transcriptomic, and protein level drive their evolution. These questions have received particularly little attention outside of snakes, cone snails, spiders, and scorpions. Venom compounds have further become a source of inspiration for translational research using their diverse bioactivities for various applications. We highlight here recent advances and new strategies in modern venomics and discuss how recent technological innovations and multi-omic methods dramatically improve research on venomous animals. The study of genomes and their modifications through CRISPR and knockdown technologies will increase our understanding of how toxins evolve and which functions they have in the different ontogenetic stages during the development of venomous animals. Mass spectrometry imaging combined with spatial transcriptomics, in situ hybridization techniques, and modern computer tomography gives us further insights into the spatial distribution of toxins in the venom system and the function of the venom apparatus. All these evolutionary and biological insights contribute to more efficiently identify venom compounds, which can then be synthesized or produced in adapted expression systems to test their bioactivity. Finally, we critically discuss recent agrochemical, pharmaceutical, therapeutic, and diagnostic (so-called translational) aspects of venoms from which humans benefit. Oxford University Press 2022-05-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9155608/ /pubmed/35640874 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giac048 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press GigaScience. 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 reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. |
spellingShingle | Review von Reumont, Bjoern M Anderluh, Gregor Antunes, Agostinho Ayvazyan, Naira Beis, Dimitris Caliskan, Figen Crnković, Ana Damm, Maik Dutertre, Sebastien Ellgaard, Lars Gajski, Goran German, Hannah Halassy, Beata Hempel, Benjamin-Florian Hucho, Tim Igci, Nasit Ikonomopoulou, Maria P Karbat, Izhar Klapa, Maria I Koludarov, Ivan Kool, Jeroen Lüddecke, Tim Ben Mansour, Riadh Vittoria Modica, Maria Moran, Yehu Nalbantsoy, Ayse Ibáñez, María Eugenia Pachón Panagiotopoulos, Alexios Reuveny, Eitan Céspedes, Javier Sánchez Sombke, Andy Surm, Joachim M Undheim, Eivind A B Verdes, Aida Zancolli, Giulia Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
title | Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
title_full | Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
title_fullStr | Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
title_full_unstemmed | Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
title_short | Modern venomics—Current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
title_sort | modern venomics—current insights, novel methods, and future perspectives in biological and applied animal venom research |
topic | Review |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9155608/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35640874 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giac048 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT vonreumontbjoernm modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT anderluhgregor modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT antunesagostinho modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT ayvazyannaira modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT beisdimitris modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT caliskanfigen modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT crnkovicana modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT dammmaik modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT dutertresebastien modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT ellgaardlars modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT gajskigoran modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT germanhannah modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT halassybeata modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT hempelbenjaminflorian modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT huchotim modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT igcinasit modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT ikonomopouloumariap modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT karbatizhar modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT klapamariai modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT koludarovivan modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT kooljeroen modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT luddecketim modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT benmansourriadh modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT vittoriamodicamaria modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT moranyehu modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT nalbantsoyayse modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT ibanezmariaeugeniapachon modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT panagiotopoulosalexios modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT reuvenyeitan modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT cespedesjaviersanchez modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT sombkeandy modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT surmjoachimm modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT undheimeivindab modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT verdesaida modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch AT zancolligiulia modernvenomicscurrentinsightsnovelmethodsandfutureperspectivesinbiologicalandappliedanimalvenomresearch |