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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Coevolution of diet and prey-specific venom activity supports the role of selection in snake venom evolution

TLDR
Examination of stomach and hindgut contents revealed extreme variation between the major clades of Echis in the proportion of arthropod prey consumed, providing strong evidence that variation in snake venom composition results from adaptive evolution driven by natural selection for different diets.
Abstract
The processes that drive the evolution of snake venom variability, particularly the role of diet, have been a topic of intense recent research interest. Here, we test whether extensive variation in venom composition in the medically important viper genus Echis is associated with shifts in diet. Examination of stomach and hindgut contents revealed extreme variation between the major clades of Echis in the proportion of arthropod prey consumed. The toxicity (median lethal dose, LD50) of representative Echis venoms to a natural scorpion prey species was found to be strongly associated with the degree of arthropod feeding. Mapping the results onto a novel Echis phylogeny generated from nuclear and mitochondrial sequence data revealed two independent instances of coevolution of venom toxicity and diet. Unlike venom LD50, the speed with which venoms incapacitated and killed scorpions was not associated with the degree of arthropod feeding. The prey-specific venom toxicity of arthropod-feeding Echis may thus be adaptive primarily by reducing venom expenditure. Overall, our results provide strong evidence that variation in snake venom composition results from adaptive evolution driven by natural selection for different diets, and underscores the need for a multi-faceted, integrative approach to the study of the causes of venom evolution.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Complex cocktails: the evolutionary novelty of venoms.

TL;DR: Through advances in 'omic' technologies, venom composition data have recently become available for several venomous lineages, revealing considerable complexity in the processes responsible for generating the genetic and functional diversity observed in many venoms.
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A Review and Database of Snake Venom Proteomes

TL;DR: This review brings together all compositional studies of snake venom proteomes published in the last decade, allowing rapid assimilation and evaluation of evolutionary trends, geographical variation, and possible medical implications.
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Medically important differences in snake venom composition are dictated by distinct postgenomic mechanisms

TL;DR: Assessment of the venom composition of six related viperid snakes reveals that multiple levels of regulation are responsible for generating variation in venom composition between related snake species, and demonstrates how this variability can undermine the treatment of a neglected tropical disease, snakebite.
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Snake Venomics of the Central American Rattlesnake Crotalus simus and the South American Crotalus durissus Complex Points to Neurotoxicity as an Adaptive Paedomorphic Trend along Crotalus Dispersal in South America

TL;DR: The increased concentration of the neurotoxins crotoxin and crotamine in South American rattlesnake venoms strongly argues that the gain of neurotoxicity and lethal venom activities to mammals may have represented the key axis along which overall venom toxicity has evolved during Crotalus durissus invasion of South America.
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Ending the drought: New strategies for improving the flow of affordable, effective antivenoms in Asia and Africa

TL;DR: Two mechanisms through which the Global Snakebite Initiative might seek to end the antivenom drought in Africa and Asia are proposed: first by establishing a multidisciplinary, multicentre, international collaboration to evaluate currently available antivenoms against the venoms of medically important snakes from specific nations in Asia using a combination of proteomic, antivenomic and WHO-endorsed preclinical assessment protocols, to provide a validated evidence base for either recommending or rejecting individual products.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice

TL;DR: The sensitivity of the commonly used progressive multiple sequence alignment method has been greatly improved and modifications are incorporated into a new program, CLUSTAL W, which is freely available.
Journal ArticleDOI

MrBayes 3: Bayesian phylogenetic inference under mixed models

TL;DR: MrBayes 3 performs Bayesian phylogenetic analysis combining information from different data partitions or subsets evolving under different stochastic evolutionary models to analyze heterogeneous data sets and explore a wide variety of structured models mixing partition-unique and shared parameters.
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Nuclear integrations: challenges for mitochondrial DNA markers

TL;DR: A better understanding of how the nuclear sequences themselves are interesting, and capable of serving as valuable molecular tools, they can also confound phylogenetic and population genetic studies.
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