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Nature’s most sophisticated biological weapon


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Nature’s most sophisticated biological weapon, snake venom, largely evolved from bits of body parts a Melbourne researcher has found.

 

lefthttp://www.hypography.com/gallery/files/9/9/8/cobra.jpg[/img]Around 65 million years ago snakes evolved glands to store and disperse their saliva. Since then many species have developed a variety of toxins to attack their victims with.

 

In the first comprehensive analysis of the origin and evolution of snake venom, Dr Bryan Fry from the University of Melbourne’s Australian Venom Research Unit says the findings may help to explain why snake venom is so effective.

 

These findings help to explain the amazing diversity of ways that venomous snakes can kill their prey and why they have so much potential use in medial research, he says.

 

In his research, Dr Fry found that rather that being derived from saliva, 21 of the 24 known snake venom toxins were found to have originally derived from proteins normally expressed in other body tissues, including brain, eye, lung, heart, liver, muscle, mammary gland, ovary and testis.

 

Only two were derived from proteins presumably expressed in reptile saliva and one did not have any similarity to any known proteins.

 

The findings will be published in the March edition of Genome Research.

 

Dr Fry says, By recruiting and tweaking proteins from other body tissues, snakes developed a clever mechanism for creating more specific and highly potent toxins, ones that would cause their victims’ bodies to turn against themselves upon injection.

 

Over time, these newly derived toxins became a normal part of the saliva protein repertoire, he says.

 

Dr Fry believes that his findings will further research efforts focussed on the use of snake toxins for therapy and treatment of diseases, including cancer, arthritis and heart disease.

 

There is something peculiarly fascinating in the use of a deadly toxin as a life-saving medicine, he says. The natural pharmacology that exists within animal venoms is a tremendous resource waiting to be tapped.

 

Source: University of Melbourne

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An interesting piece. The researcher probably did not write the press release though because there is a minor error in the opening paragraph. Snakes are an offshoot of lizards (notably the skinks). There are a few poisonous lizards from this lineage as well (Mexican beaded lizard and the gila monster). These are not fanged animals, they have a canal in their mouth that the venom seaps down as it is squeezed from the venom glands by the contracting jaw muscles. Very similar structure used in rear fanged snakes (Such as the mangrove snake).

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An interesting piece. The researcher probably did not write the press release though because there is a minor error in the opening paragraph. Snakes are an offshoot of lizards (notably the skinks).

 

So, snakes had these glands already as they evolved from lizards or did the snakes simply evolve glands similar to those that evolved in their lizard cousins? You're probably right though, I doubt Dr. Fry wrote the press release himself.

 

I do remember reading some other research where Gila Monster venom was being experimented with for use in controlling pain. I remember reading the same about the venom from a Platypus as well. If I remember correctly the venom of both of these animals causes excruciating pain. For this reason it is theorized that they may be useful in developing new pain killers.

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