Profiling the resting venom gland of the scorpion Tityus stigmurus through a transcriptomic survey

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Abstract

Background: The scorpion Tityus stigmurus is widely distributed in Northeastern Brazil and known to cause severe human envenoming, inducing pain, hyposthesia, edema, erythema, paresthesia, headaches and vomiting. The present study uses a transcriptomic approach to characterize the gene expression profile from the non-stimulated venom gland of Tityus stigmurus scorpion.Results: A cDNA library was constructed and 540 clones were sequenced and grouped into 153 clusters, with one or more ESTs (expressed sequence tags). Forty-one percent of ESTs belong to recognized toxin-coding sequences, with transcripts encoding antimicrobial toxins (AMP-like) being the most abundant, followed by alfa KTx- like, beta KTx-like, beta NaTx-like and alfa NaTx-like. Our analysis indicated that 34% of the transcripts encode " other possible venom molecules" , which correspond to anionic peptides, hypothetical secreted peptides, metalloproteinases, cystein-rich peptides and lectins. Fifteen percent of ESTs are similar to cellular transcripts. Sequences without good matches corresponded to 11%.Conclusions: This investigation provides the first global view of gene expression of the venom gland from Tityus stigmurus under resting conditions. This approach enables characterization of a large number of venom gland component molecules, which belong either to known or non yet described types of venom peptides and proteins from the Buthidae family. © 2012 Almeida et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Almeida, D. D., Scortecci, K. C., Kobashi, L. S., Agnez-Lima, L. F., Medeiros, S. R. B., Silva-Junior, A. A., … Fernandes-Pedrosa, M. D. F. (2012). Profiling the resting venom gland of the scorpion Tityus stigmurus through a transcriptomic survey. BMC Genomics, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-13-362

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