In
order to better understand the evolutionary history of snake venom, an
international research college investigated the genome of a Japanese specimen,
the Okinawa habu.
When
taking science to the next level, a certain measure of courage is sometimes
needed. Scientists have been collecting DNA samples directly from snake
specimens in Japan in order to uncover the mysteries surrounding their venom.
They targeted a common snake species from the Ryukyu islands, named after one
of the islands in the archipelago: the Okinawa habu. Also called Protobothrops
flavoviridis or honhabu, it is the most venomous of the three species of habu
found on the island.
Following
the courageous act of obtaining venom, blood and skin samples from wild
specimens, scientists looked at their genome. Their goal was to better
understand the mechanisms involved in the evolution of snake venom. They
therefore deconstructed the entire genome of the species using a
high-performance sequencer at the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology.
With
this sequencing the researchers were particularly interested in the genes
responsible for venom production. They detected sixty of these genes, and were
able to determine that they came from 18 different gene families, which were
occasionally common to other more distant species. To better understand the
usefulness of this discovery, different families of venomous snakes were
studied.
The
Okinawa habu belongs to the Viperidae family, which has hemotoxic venom that
attacks blood cells and tissues. The other big family of poisonous snakes is
the Elapidae, which includes the cobra species, which have a neurotoxic venom
that attacks the nervous system. Other snake groups exist, but these two
categories are the only ones to consist of species that are uniquely venomous.
Researchers
have found similarities with the genomes of other species in these different
groups. They were able to single out the existence and the position of a common
ancestor on the phylogenetic tree, where two different lines of serpents
diverged. This snake would have existed a little over 60 million years ago, and
the toxins present in the venom of present-day snakes could derive from that of
this ancestor.
Scientists
went even further back in evolution of snakes. According to the findings of
their study, the first appearance of venom was probably 185 million years ago,
which corresponds to the time when the Toxicofera ancestor differentiated itself
from other scaled reptiles known as Squamates.
In
this branch, some lizards in the Autarchoglossa group are also poisonous.
Professor Shibata, one of the authors of the study, when explaining this
connection says that ‘the gene copies associated with venom production have
their origins from long ago, possibly at one of the earliest stages of
vertebrate evolution.’
Venoms
are complex cocktails composed of many proteins. This research, beyond giving
us a better view of its evolution, provides valuable information on the venom
of the honhabu, and on how to make more effective antidotes. About 50 people
are bitten annually in Japan.
According
to the press release, the properties of venoms are also of interest to
researchers in order to make new types of drugs, which would potentially be
able to fight against cancer, or cardiovascular disease. In the meantime,
multiples branches of research on different venomous species should help
unravel the enigma of venom production in snakes.
‘Genome
decoding is a powerful tool for understanding the mechanisms involved in the
evolution of snake venom. We expect that different species of poisonous snakes
produce different protein cocktails, derived from new gene arrangements, so
decoding the genome of other snakes is essential to understanding the entire
evolutionary process,’ said the group of researchers in conclusion.
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