χ-Conotoxins are an evolutionary innovation of mollusk-hunting cone snails as a counter-adaptation to prey defense

Mol Biol Evol. 2024 Oct 29:msae226. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msae226. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Mollusk-hunting (molluscivorous) cone snails belong to a monophyletic group in Conus, a genus of venomous marine snails. The molluscivorous lineage evolved from ancestral worm-hunting (vermivorous) snails ∼18 million years ago. To enable the shift to a molluscivorous lifestyle, molluscivorous cone snails must solve biological problems encountered when hunting other gastropods, namely: 1) preventing prey escape and 2) overcoming the formidable defense of the prey in the form of the molluscan shell, a problem unique to molluscivorous Conus. Here we show that χ-conotoxins, peptides exclusively expressed in the venoms of molluscivorous Conus, provide solutions to the above problems. Injecting χ-conotoxins into the gastropod mollusk Aplysia californica results in impaired locomotion and uncoordinated hyperactivity. Impaired locomotion impedes escape and a hyperactive snail will likely emerge from its shell, negating the protection the shell provides. Thus, χ-conotoxins are an evolutionary innovation that accompanied the emergence of molluscivory in Conus and provide solutions to problems posed by hunting other snails.