Cargando…

The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing

In the so-called “struggle for existence” competition, the venomous animals developed a smart and effective strategy, envenomation, for predation and defense. Biochemical analysis revealed that animal venoms are chemical pools of proteinase, peptide toxins, and small organic molecules with various b...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wu, Xiangyue, Chen, Yan, Liu, Hao, Kong, Xiangjin, Liang, Xinyao, Zhang, Yu, Tang, Cheng, Liu, Zhonghua
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9959208/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36828457
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins15020143
_version_ 1784895217796644864
author Wu, Xiangyue
Chen, Yan
Liu, Hao
Kong, Xiangjin
Liang, Xinyao
Zhang, Yu
Tang, Cheng
Liu, Zhonghua
author_facet Wu, Xiangyue
Chen, Yan
Liu, Hao
Kong, Xiangjin
Liang, Xinyao
Zhang, Yu
Tang, Cheng
Liu, Zhonghua
author_sort Wu, Xiangyue
collection PubMed
description In the so-called “struggle for existence” competition, the venomous animals developed a smart and effective strategy, envenomation, for predation and defense. Biochemical analysis revealed that animal venoms are chemical pools of proteinase, peptide toxins, and small organic molecules with various biological activities. Of them, peptide toxins are of great molecular diversity and possess the capacity to modulate the activity of ion channels, the second largest group of drug targets expressed on the cell membrane, which makes them a rich resource for developing peptide drug pioneers. The spider Lycosa coelestis (L. coelestis) commonly found in farmland in China is a dominant natural enemy of agricultural pests; however, its venom composition and activity were never explored. Herein, we conducted cDNA library and transcriptomic sequencing of the venom gland of L. coelestis, which identified 1131 high-quality expressed sequence tags (ESTs), grouped into three categories denoted as toxin-like ESTs (597, 52.79%), cellular component ESTs (357, 31.56%), and non-matched ESTs (177, 15.65%). These toxin-like ESTs encode 98 non-reductant toxins, which are artificially divided into 11 families based on their sequence homology and cysteine frameworks (2–14 cysteines forming 1–7 disulfide bonds to stabilize the toxin structure). Furthermore, RP-HPLC purification combined with off-line MALDI-TOF analysis have detected 147 different peptides physically existing in the venom of L. coelestis. Electrophysiology analysis confirmed that the venom preferably inhibits the voltage-gated calcium channels in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons. Altogether, the present study has added a great lot of new members to the spider toxin superfamily and built the foundation for characterizing novel active peptides in the L. coelestis venom.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9959208
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99592082023-02-26 The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing Wu, Xiangyue Chen, Yan Liu, Hao Kong, Xiangjin Liang, Xinyao Zhang, Yu Tang, Cheng Liu, Zhonghua Toxins (Basel) Article In the so-called “struggle for existence” competition, the venomous animals developed a smart and effective strategy, envenomation, for predation and defense. Biochemical analysis revealed that animal venoms are chemical pools of proteinase, peptide toxins, and small organic molecules with various biological activities. Of them, peptide toxins are of great molecular diversity and possess the capacity to modulate the activity of ion channels, the second largest group of drug targets expressed on the cell membrane, which makes them a rich resource for developing peptide drug pioneers. The spider Lycosa coelestis (L. coelestis) commonly found in farmland in China is a dominant natural enemy of agricultural pests; however, its venom composition and activity were never explored. Herein, we conducted cDNA library and transcriptomic sequencing of the venom gland of L. coelestis, which identified 1131 high-quality expressed sequence tags (ESTs), grouped into three categories denoted as toxin-like ESTs (597, 52.79%), cellular component ESTs (357, 31.56%), and non-matched ESTs (177, 15.65%). These toxin-like ESTs encode 98 non-reductant toxins, which are artificially divided into 11 families based on their sequence homology and cysteine frameworks (2–14 cysteines forming 1–7 disulfide bonds to stabilize the toxin structure). Furthermore, RP-HPLC purification combined with off-line MALDI-TOF analysis have detected 147 different peptides physically existing in the venom of L. coelestis. Electrophysiology analysis confirmed that the venom preferably inhibits the voltage-gated calcium channels in rat dorsal root ganglion neurons. Altogether, the present study has added a great lot of new members to the spider toxin superfamily and built the foundation for characterizing novel active peptides in the L. coelestis venom. MDPI 2023-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9959208/ /pubmed/36828457 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins15020143 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wu, Xiangyue
Chen, Yan
Liu, Hao
Kong, Xiangjin
Liang, Xinyao
Zhang, Yu
Tang, Cheng
Liu, Zhonghua
The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing
title The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing
title_full The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing
title_fullStr The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing
title_full_unstemmed The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing
title_short The Molecular Composition of Peptide Toxins in the Venom of Spider Lycosa coelestis as Revealed by cDNA Library and Transcriptomic Sequencing
title_sort molecular composition of peptide toxins in the venom of spider lycosa coelestis as revealed by cdna library and transcriptomic sequencing
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9959208/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36828457
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins15020143
work_keys_str_mv AT wuxiangyue themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT chenyan themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT liuhao themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT kongxiangjin themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT liangxinyao themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT zhangyu themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT tangcheng themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT liuzhonghua themolecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT wuxiangyue molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT chenyan molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT liuhao molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT kongxiangjin molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT liangxinyao molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT zhangyu molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT tangcheng molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing
AT liuzhonghua molecularcompositionofpeptidetoxinsinthevenomofspiderlycosacoelestisasrevealedbycdnalibraryandtranscriptomicsequencing