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Dramatic dietary shift maintains sequestered toxins in chemically defended snakes.

Authors :
Tatsuya Yoshida
Rinako Ujiie
Savitzky, Alan H.
Teppei Jonoc
Takato Inoue
Naoko Yoshinaga
Shunsuke Aburaya
Wataru Aoki
Hirohiko Takeuchi
Li Ding
Qin Chen
Chengquan Cao
Tein-Shun Tsai
de Silva, Anslem
Mahaulpatha, Dharshani
Tao Thien Nguyen
Yezhong Tang
Naoki Mori
Akira Mori
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 3/17/2020, Vol. 117 Issue 11, p5964-5969. 6p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Unlike other snakes, most species of Rhabdophis possess glands in their dorsal skin, sometimes limited to the neck, known as nuchodorsal and nuchal glands, respectively. Those glands contain powerful cardiotonic steroids known as bufadienolides, which can be deployed as a defense against predators. Bufadienolides otherwise occur only in toads (Bufonidae) and some fireflies (Lampyrinae), which are known or believed to synthesize the toxins. The ancestral diet of Rhabdophis consists of anuran amphibians, and we have shown previously that the bufadienolide toxins of frog-eating species are sequestered from toads consumed as prey. However, one derived clade, the Rhabdophis nuchalis Group, has shifted its primary diet from frogs to earthworms. Here we confirm that the worm-eating snakes possess bufadienolides in their nucho-dorsal glands, although the worms themselves lack such toxins. In addition, we show that the bufadienolides of R. nuchalis Group species are obtained primarily from fireflies. Although few snakes feed on insects, we document through feeding experiments, chemosensory preference tests, and gut contents that lampyrine firefly larvae are regularly consumed by these snakes. Furthermore, members of the R. nuchalis Group contain compounds that resemble the distinctive bufadienolides of fireflies, but not those of toads, in stereochemistry, glycosylation, acetylation, and molecular weight. Thus, the evolutionary shift in primary prey among members of the R. nuchalis Group has been accompanied by a dramatic shift in the source of the species' sequestered defensive toxins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
117
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142373844
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1919065117