Maik Damm , Ignazio Avella , Reema Merzara , Nahla Lucchini , Jon Buldain , Frederico Corga , Abdellah Bouazza , Soumia Fahd , Roderich D. Süssmuth , Fernando Martínez-Freiría
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The North African mountain viper (Vipera monticola) is a medically relevant venomous snake distributed in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia. Three subspecies of V. monticola, exhibiting differences in morphotypes and dietary regimes, are currently recognised: V. m. monticola, V. m. atlantica, and V. m. saintgironsi. Through the application of snake venomics, we analysed the venoms of specimens of Moroccan origin belonging to each of the three subspecies. Snake venom metalloproteinases (svMP), snake venom serine proteases (svSP), C-type lectin and C-type lectin-related proteins (CTL), and phospholipases A2 (PLA2) were predominant, with PLA2 being the most abundant toxin family overall. Disintegrins (DI) and cysteine-rich secretory proteins (CRISP) were exclusive to V. m. monticola and V. m. atlantica, while l-amino-acid oxidases (LAAO) were only found in V. m. saintgironsi. The differences detected in the venom profiles, as well as in presence/absence and relative abundances of toxin families, indicate the occurrence of intraspecific venom variation within V. monticola. The identified patterns of venom similarity between subspecies seem to align more with their phylogenetic relationships than with the reported differences in their feeding habits.
期刊介绍:
Biochimie publishes original research articles, short communications, review articles, graphical reviews, mini-reviews, and hypotheses in the broad areas of biology, including biochemistry, enzymology, molecular and cell biology, metabolic regulation, genetics, immunology, microbiology, structural biology, genomics, proteomics, and molecular mechanisms of disease. Biochimie publishes exclusively in English.
Articles are subject to peer review, and must satisfy the requirements of originality, high scientific integrity and general interest to a broad range of readers. Submissions that are judged to be of sound scientific and technical quality but do not fully satisfy the requirements for publication in Biochimie may benefit from a transfer service to a more suitable journal within the same subject area.