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The Holothuria leucospilota genome elucidates sacrificial organ expulsion and bioadhesive trap enriched with amyloid-patterned proteins.

Authors :
Ting Chen
Chunhua Ren
Nai-Kei Wong
Aifen Yan
Caiyun Sun
Dingding Fan
Peng Luo
Xiao Jiang
Lvping Zhang
Yao Ruan
Jiaxi Li
Xiaofen Wu
Da Huo
Jiasheng Huang
Xiaomin Li
Feifei Wu
E., Zixuan
Chuhang Cheng
Xin Zhang
Yanhong Wang
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 4/18/2023, Vol. 120 Issue 16, Following p1-9. 31p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Some tropical sea cucumbers of the family Holothuriidae can efficiently repel or even fatally ensnare predators by sacrificially ejecting a bioadhesive matrix termed the Cuvierian organ (CO), so named by the French zoologist Georges Cuvier who first described it in 1831. Still, the precise mechanisms for how adhesiveness genetically arose in CO and how sea cucumbers perceive and transduce danger signals for CO expulsion during defense have remained unclear. Here, we report the first high-quality, chromosome-level genome assembly of Holothuria leucospilota, an ecologically significant sea cucumber with prototypical CO. The H. leucospilota genome reveals characteristic long-repeat signatures in CO-specific outer-layer proteins, analogous to fibrous proteins of disparate species origins, including spider spidroin and silkworm fibroin. Intriguingly, several CO-specific proteins occur with amyloid-like patterns featuring extensive intramolecular cross-β structures readily stainable by amyloid indicator dyes. Distinct proteins within the CO connective tissue and outer surface cooperate to give the expelled matrix its apparent tenacity and adhesiveness, respectively. Genomic evidence offers further hints that H. leucospilota directly transduces predator-induced mechanical pressure onto the CO surface through mediation by transient receptor potential channels, which culminates in acetylcholine-triggered CO expulsion in part or in entirety. Evolutionarily, innovative events in two distinct regions of the H. leucospilota genome have apparently spurred CO’s differentiation from the respiratory tree to a lethal defensive organ against predators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00278424
Volume :
120
Issue :
16
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163118890
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2213512120