University of Wollongong
Browse

Small-molecule mimicry hunting strategy in the imperial cone snail, Conus imperialis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 15:13 authored by Joshua P Torres, Zhenjian Lin, Maren Watkins, Paula Flórez Salcedo, Robert P Baskin, Shireen Elhabian, Helena Safavi-Hemami, Dylan Taylor, Jortan Tun, Gisela P Concepcion, Noel Saguil, Angel A Yanagihara, Yixin Fang, Jeffrey R McArthur, Han Shen Tae, Rocio K Finol-Urdaneta, B Duygu Özpolat, Baldomero M Olivera, Eric W Schmidt
Venomous animals hunt using bioactive peptides, but relatively little is known about venom small molecules and the resulting complex hunting behaviors. Here, we explored the specialized metabolites from the venom of the worm-hunting cone snail, Conus imperialis. Using the model polychaete worm Platynereis dumerilii, we demonstrate that C. imperialis venom contains small molecules that mimic natural polychaete mating pheromones, evoking the mating phenotype in worms. The specialized metabolites from different cone snails are species-specific and structurally diverse, suggesting that the cones may adopt many different prey-hunting strategies enabled by small molecules. Predators sometimes attract prey using the prey's own pheromones, in a strategy known as aggressive mimicry. Instead, C. imperialis uses metabolically stable mimics of those pheromones, indicating that, in biological mimicry, even the molecules themselves may be disguised, providing a twist on fake news in chemical ecology.

Funding

National Institutes of Health (W81XWH-17-1-0413)

History

Journal title

Science Advances

Volume

7

Issue

11

Language

English

Usage metrics

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC