The transcriptome recipe for the venom cocktail of Tityus bahiensis scorpion

Scorpion venom is a mixture of peptides, including antimicrobial, bradykinin-potentiating and anionic peptides and small to medium proteins, such as ion channel toxins, metalloproteinases and phospholipases that together cause severe clinical manifestation. Tityus bahiensis is the second most medica...

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Veröffentlicht in:Toxicon (Oxford) 2015-03, Vol.95, p.52-61
Hauptverfasser: de Oliveira, Ursula Castro, Candido, Denise Maria, Coronado Dorce, Valquíria Abrão, Junqueira-de-Azevedo, Inácio de Loiola Meirelles
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Scorpion venom is a mixture of peptides, including antimicrobial, bradykinin-potentiating and anionic peptides and small to medium proteins, such as ion channel toxins, metalloproteinases and phospholipases that together cause severe clinical manifestation. Tityus bahiensis is the second most medically important scorpion species in Brazil and it is widely distributed in the country with the exception of the North Region. Here we sequenced and analyzed the transcripts from the venom glands of T. bahiensis, aiming at identifying and annotating venom gland expressed genes. A total of 116,027 long reads were generated by pyrosequencing and assembled in 2891 isotigs. An annotation process identified transcripts by similarity to known toxins, revealing that putative venom components represent 7.4% of gene expression. The major toxins identified are potassium and sodium channel toxins, whereas metalloproteinases showed an unexpected high abundance. Phylogenetic analysis of deduced metalloproteinases from T. bahiensis and other scorpions revealed a pattern of ancient and intraspecific gene expansions. Other venom molecules identified include antimicrobial, anionic and bradykinin-potentiating peptides, besides several putative new venom components. This report provides the first attempt to massively identify the venom components of this species and constitutes one of the few transcriptomic efforts on the genus Tityus. •A total of 116,027 reads were generated by pyrosequencing from Tityus bahiensis telsons.•17 toxin categories were identified, representing 7.4% of gene expression in the Tityus venom glands.•Sodium and potassium channel acting peptides comprise the most diversified classes of toxins.•Metalloproteinases are the most abundant transcripts sequenced (32.7% of total toxins) and consist of a series of paralogues.
ISSN:0041-0101
1879-3150
DOI:10.1016/j.toxicon.2014.12.013