TY - CHAP
T1 - Molecular Evolution of Snake Toxins
T2 - Is the Functional Diversity of Snake Toxins Associated with a Mechanism of Accelerated Evolution?
AU - Ohno, M.
AU - Ménez, R.
AU - Ogawa, T.
AU - Danse, J. M.
AU - Shimohigashi, Y.
AU - Fromen, C.
AU - Ducancel, F.
AU - Zinn-Justin, S.
AU - Le Du, M. H.
AU - Boulain, J. C.
AU - Tamiya, T.
AU - Ménez, A.
PY - 1997/1/1
Y1 - 1997/1/1
N2 - Recent studies revealed that animal toxins with unrelated biological functions often possess a similar architecture. To tentatively understand the evolutionary mechanisms that may govern this principle of functional prodigality associated with a structural economy, two complementary approaches were considered. One of them consisted of investigating the rates of mutations that occur in cDNAs and/or genes that encode a variety of toxins with the same fold. This approach was largely adopted with phospholipases A2 from Viperidae and to a lesser extent with three-fingered toxins from Elapidae and Hydrophiidae. Another approach consisted of investigating how a given fold can accommodate distinct functional topographies. Thus, a number of topologies by which three-fingered toxins exert distinct functions were investigated either by making chemical modifications and/or mutational analyses or by studying the three-dimensional structure of toxin-target complexes. This review shows that, although the two approaches are different, they commonly indicate that most if not all the surface of a snake toxin fold undergoes natural engineering, which may be associated with an accelerated rate of evolution. The biochemical process by which this phenomenon occurs remains unknown.
AB - Recent studies revealed that animal toxins with unrelated biological functions often possess a similar architecture. To tentatively understand the evolutionary mechanisms that may govern this principle of functional prodigality associated with a structural economy, two complementary approaches were considered. One of them consisted of investigating the rates of mutations that occur in cDNAs and/or genes that encode a variety of toxins with the same fold. This approach was largely adopted with phospholipases A2 from Viperidae and to a lesser extent with three-fingered toxins from Elapidae and Hydrophiidae. Another approach consisted of investigating how a given fold can accommodate distinct functional topographies. Thus, a number of topologies by which three-fingered toxins exert distinct functions were investigated either by making chemical modifications and/or mutational analyses or by studying the three-dimensional structure of toxin-target complexes. This review shows that, although the two approaches are different, they commonly indicate that most if not all the surface of a snake toxin fold undergoes natural engineering, which may be associated with an accelerated rate of evolution. The biochemical process by which this phenomenon occurs remains unknown.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0079-6603(08)61036-3
DO - 10.1016/S0079-6603(08)61036-3
M3 - Chapter
C2 - 9427847
AN - SCOPUS:17644434301
T3 - Progress in Nucleic Acid Research and Molecular Biology
SP - 307
EP - 364
BT - Progress in Nucleic Acid Research and Molecular Biology
ER -