| Literature DB >> 23452837 |
Anthony J Saviola1, David Chiszar, Chardelle Busch, Stephen P Mackessy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vertebrate predators use a broad arsenal of behaviors and weaponry for overcoming fractious and potentially dangerous prey. A unique array of predatory strategies occur among snakes, ranging from mechanical modes of constriction and jaw-holding in non-venomous snakes, to a chemical means, venom, for quickly dispatching prey. However, even among venomous snakes, different prey handling strategies are utilized, varying from the strike-and-hold behaviors exhibited by highly toxic elapid snakes to the rapid strike-and-release envenomation seen in viperid snakes. For vipers, this mode of envenomation represents a minimal risk predatory strategy by permitting little contact with or retaliation from prey, but it adds the additional task of relocating envenomated prey which has wandered from the attack site. This task is further confounded by trails of other unstruck conspecific or heterospecific prey. Despite decades of behavioral study, researchers still do not know the molecular mechanism which allows for prey relocation.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23452837 PMCID: PMC3635877 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7007-11-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Rattlesnakes discriminate between non-envenomated and envenomated mice
| Sample | NE | E | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Venom (n = 7) | 32 (8.45) | 83 (15.9) | 3.67** |
| 29 | 71 (5.65) | 3.76** |
Mean number of tongue flicks and mean percent (lower values) tongue flicks (s.e.m.) directed at non-envenomated (NE) and envenomated (E) mice by Crotalus atrox when mice were envenomated by whole crude venom. Single-sample t-test was conducted on mean percentages where mean percent to E mice were compared with 50%, the value expected under the null hypothesis; df = 6. Because the two means are not independent, the same t value but with the opposite sign would be obtained for each mean. For raw data, see Additional file 1, Table S1. ** P < 0.01.
Figure 1Discrimination of envenomated prey is not dependent on enzymatic toxins. (A) Size exclusion fractionation of 250 mg crude C. atrox venom on a 90 × 2.8 cm BioGel P-100 column equilibrated with HEPES/NaCl/CaCl2 buffer. Fractionation occurred at a flow rate of 6.3 mL per hour at 4°C, and eluting proteins/peptides were followed by absorbance at 280 nm. Enzyme activities common to rattlesnake venoms were assayed and are limited to the first two peaks. Arrow indicates the peak containing crotatroxins 1 and 2 (Peak III). (B) MALDI-TOF-MS analysis of peptides in BioGel size exclusion Peak III. Approximately 0.5 μg protein was spotted onto sinapinic acid matrix and analyzed using a mass window of 3 to 25 kD. Several peptides with masses typical of monomeric disintegrins (7,245 to 7,655 Da) were present, but no larger proteins were observed.
Prey discrimination is associated with non-enzymatic fractions.
| Fraction | NE | E | df | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peak I | 67.4 (11.9) | 68.7 (12.3) | 0.09 | 16 |
| Peak IIa | 72.9 (15.6) | 59.0 (12.7) | 0.70 | 10 |
| Peak IIb | 73.3 (18.4) | 69.2 (15.3) | 0.22 | 9 |
| Peak III | 25.3 (5.1) | 53.6 (7.7) | 4.24** | 10 |
| Small peptide peaks (combined) | 33.0 (7.7) | 52.7 (24.6) | 0.79 | 8 |
Mean number of tongue flicks and mean percent (lower values) tongue flicks (s.e.m.) directed at non-envenomated (NE) and envenomated (E) mice by Crotalus atrox when mice were envenomated using BioGel Peaks I, IIa, IIb, III or combined peptide peaks. Single-sample t-test was conducted on mean percentages in which mean percent tongue flicks to E mice were compared with 50%, the value expected under the null hypothesis. Because the two means within each paired comparison are not independent, the same t-value but with the opposite sign would be obtained for each mean. For raw data, see Additional file 1, Table S1. ** P < 0.01.
Figure 2Peak III consist only of 7 kDa peptides. (A) Reversed-phase chromatography of Peak III from the gel filtration step (BioGel P-100). Two hundred microliters was injected onto a Vydac C18 (4.6 × 250 mm) column, and disintegrin peaks were eluted at 23% buffer B (13 to 14 minutes). (B) MALDI-TOF-MS analysis of crotatroxin 1 from the reverse-phase chromatography purification step (fraction 13). Mass of 7,440.35 was observed for crotatroxin 1. (C) MALDI-TOF-MS analysis of crotatroxin 2 from the reverse-phase chromatography purification step (fraction 14). Mass of 7,383.29 was observed for crotatroxin 2.
Figure 3N-terminal sequence of Peak III peptides (Relocator) confirms identity with crotatroxins (CT) 1 and 2. Note that CTs 1 and 2 are identical in sequence except for the additional N-terminal alanine residue in CT1. Protein sequencing of the relocator peak showed lower yield (approximately 3 pmol, compared to approximately 6.5 pmol for residues 2 to 6) and presence of an N-terminal alanine at residue 1, indicating that both CTs were present. No secondary sequence (indicative of potential contaminant proteins) was observed.