Sea anemone MACPF proteins demonstrate an evolutionary transitional state between venomous and developmental functions

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Sea anemone MACPF proteins demonstrate an evolutionary transitional state between venomous and developmental functions

Authors

Surm, J. M.; Landau, M.; Columbus-Shenkar, Y. Y.; Moran, Y.

Abstract

Gene duplication is a major force driving evolutionary innovation. A classic example is generating new animal toxins via duplication of physiological protein-encoding genes and recruitment into venom. While this process drives the innovation of many animal venoms, reverse-recruitment of toxins into non-venomous cells remains unresolved. Using comparative genomics, we find members of the Membrane Attack Complex and Perforin Family (MACPF) have been recruited into venom-injecting cells (cnidocytes), in soft and stony corals and sea anemones, suggesting that the ancestral MACPF was a cnidocyte expressed toxin. Further investigation into the model sea anemone Nematostella vectensis, reveals that three members have undergone Nematostella-specific duplications leading to their reverse-recruitment into mesoendodermal cells. Furthermore, simultaneous knock-down of all three mesoendodermally-expressed MACPFs leads to mis-development, supporting that these paralogs have non-venomous function. By resolving the evolutionary history and function of MACPFs in Nematostella, we provide the first proof for reverse-recruitment from venom to organismal development.

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