Lineage-Specific Venom Gene Expression Shapes Chemical Diversity in Cephalopods

谱系特异性毒液基因表达塑造头足类动物的化学多样性

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Abstract

Animal venoms represent a major source of chemical novelty, yet how venom compounds originate, diversify, and are maintained across deep evolutionary timescales remains poorly understood. This gap is especially pronounced in cephalopods, which evolved venom systems used in predation, defense, and sexual competition, but whose venom genetic architectures, secretory cell types, and venom-producing glands remain largely unexplored. To date, only a single cephalopod venom compound with confirmed paralytic activity and a known primary sequence, SE-CTX from the golden cuttlefish Acanthosepion esculentum , has been described. Here, we reconstruct the evolutionary history, molecular diversity, and glandular localization of SE-CTX-like proteins using a multimodal approach. We identify 29 homologs across 20 squid and cuttlefish species and define a previously unrecognized venom gene family, which we name deca-ctx , specific to decapodiform cephalopods (squids and cuttlefish). Phylogenetic analyses reveal a single origin of deca-ctx followed by gene duplication and lineage-specific diversification, indicating long-term retention of this venom gene. Predicted DECA-CTX protein structures were separated into two clusters and 20 singletons highlighting potentially extensive structural diversity within a single cephalopod venom gene family. Proteomic analysis confirms expression of five DECA-CTX proteins across three species. Our imaging and histological analyses localize deca-ctx expression to specialized secretory cells within squid and cuttlefish venom glands. Together, these findings reposition SE-CTX as part of an evolutionarily and chemically diverse venom system, rather than an isolated venom protein, and establish cephalopods as a key lineage for investigating how new venom genes arise, diversify, and are integrated into functional venom arsenals.

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