
AbstractIt is long known that peptide neurotoxins derived from a diversity of venomous animals evolve by positive selection following gene duplication, yet a force that drives their adaptive evolution remains a mystery. By using maximum-likelihood models of codon substitution, we analyzed molecular adaptation in scorpion sodium channel toxins from a specific species and found ten positively selected sites, six of which are located at the core-domain of scorpion α-toxins, a region known to interact with two adjacent loops in the voltage-sensor domain (DIV) of sodium channels, as validated by our newly constructed computational model of toxin-channel complex. Despite the lack of positive selection signals in these two loops, they accumulated extensive sequence variations by relaxed purifying selection in prey and predators of scorpions. The evolutionary variability in the toxin-bound regions of sodium channels indicates that accelerated substitutions in the multigene family of scorpion toxins is a consequence of dealing with the target diversity. This work presents an example of atypical co-evolution between animal toxins and their molecular targets, in which toxins suffered from more prominent selective pressure from the channels of their competitors. Our discovery helps explain the evolutionary rationality of gene duplication of toxins in a specific venomous species.
Binding Sites, Food Chain, Insecta, Molecular Sequence Data, Neurotoxins, Gene Expression, Genetic Variation, Reptiles, Scorpion Venoms, Article, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Birds, Evolution, Molecular, Molecular Docking Simulation, Scorpions, Gene Duplication, Multigene Family, Animals, Amino Acid Sequence, Protein Binding
Binding Sites, Food Chain, Insecta, Molecular Sequence Data, Neurotoxins, Gene Expression, Genetic Variation, Reptiles, Scorpion Venoms, Article, Protein Structure, Secondary, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Birds, Evolution, Molecular, Molecular Docking Simulation, Scorpions, Gene Duplication, Multigene Family, Animals, Amino Acid Sequence, Protein Binding
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