نتایج جستجو برای: scorpions venom

تعداد نتایج: 10127  

Journal: :Alternative medicine review : a journal of clinical therapeutic 2011
E Paul Cherniack

In this second of a two-part series analyzing the evidence for the use of organisms as medicine, the use of a number of different "bugs" (worms, leeches, snails, ticks, centipedes, and spiders) is detailed. Several live organisms are used as treatments: leeches for plastic surgery and osteoarthritis and the helminths Trichuris suis and Necator americanus for inflammatory bowel disease. Leech sa...

2015
Rong Chen Shin-Ho Chung Jean-Marc Sabatier

Small peptides isolated from the venom of animals are potential scaffolds for ion channel drug discovery. This review article mainly focuses on the computational studies that have advanced our understanding of how various toxins interfere with the function of K⁺ channels. We introduce the computational tools available for the study of toxin-channel interactions. We then discuss how these comput...

2017
Sina Jami Andelain Erickson Stuart M Brierley Irina Vetter

Venoms are produced by a wide variety of species including spiders, scorpions, reptiles, cnidarians, and fish for the purpose of harming or incapacitating predators or prey. While some venoms are of relatively simple composition, many contain hundreds to thousands of individual components with distinct pharmacological activity. Pain-inducing or "algesic" venom compounds have proven invaluable t...

2017
Mukesh Kumar

Introduction Accidental scorpion sting is a serious health issue of poor communities in tropical and subtropical areas throughout the world. Out of 1500 scorpion species distributed throughout the world, only 50 scorpion species have been proved lethal to human [1]. The symptoms of scorpion envenomation depend on species, age, venom composition and the victim’s physiological response. Scorpion ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Jennifer J Smith Justine M Hill Michelle J Little Graham M Nicholson Glenn F King Paul F Alewood

The three-disulfide inhibitor cystine knot (ICK) motif is a fold common to venom peptides from spiders, scorpions, and aquatic cone snails. Over a decade ago it was proposed that the ICK motif is an elaboration of an ancestral two-disulfide fold coined the disulfide-directed β-hairpin (DDH). Here we report the isolation, characterization, and structure of a novel toxin [U(1)-liotoxin-Lw1a (U(1)...

2017
Arie van der Meijden Bjørn Koch Tom van der Valk Leidy J Vargas-Muñoz Sebastian Estrada-Gómez

Scorpions use their venom in defensive situations as well as for subduing prey. Since some species of scorpion use their venom more in defensive situations than others, this may have led to selection for differences in effectiveness in defensive situations. Here, we compared the LD50 of the venom of 10 species of scorpions on five different species of target organisms; two insects and three ver...

Journal: :Toxicology in vitro : an international journal published in association with BIBRA 2011
Jamil Zargan Sadiq Umar Mir Sajad M Naime Shakir Ali Haider A Khan

Venom of some species of scorpions induces apoptosis and arrests proliferation in cancer cells. This is an important property that can be harnessed and can lead to isolation of compounds of therapeutic importance in cancer research. Cytotoxicity was investigated using MTT reduction and confirmed with lactate dehydrogenase release following venom exposure. Apoptosis was evaluated with determinat...

ژورنال: کومش 2022

Introduction: Infectious diseases, mainly caused by bacterial agents, are one of the most common causes of death worldwide. A significant number of these agents have been resistant to one or more antibiotics; some of them are multi-drug resistant and others are extensively drug resistant. Various antimicrobial and anticancer compounds have been reported from the venom of various species of scor...

2014
Prachi Anand Alexandre Grigoryan Mohammed H. Bhuiyan Beatrix Ueberheide Victoria Russell Jose Quinoñez Patrick Moy Brian T. Chait Sébastien F. Poget Mandë Holford

Disulfide-rich peptide toxins found in the secretions of venomous organisms such as snakes, spiders, scorpions, leeches, and marine snails are highly efficient and effective tools for novel therapeutic drug development. Venom peptide toxins have been used extensively to characterize ion channels in the nervous system and platelet aggregation in haemostatic systems. A significant hurdle in chara...

Journal: :Annual review of genomics and human genetics 2009
Bryan G Fry Kim Roelants Donald E Champagne Holger Scheib Joel D A Tyndall Glenn F King Timo J Nevalainen Janette A Norman Richard J Lewis Raymond S Norton Camila Renjifo Ricardo C Rodríguez de la Vega

Throughout evolution, numerous proteins have been convergently recruited into the venoms of various animals, including centipedes, cephalopods, cone snails, fish, insects (several independent venom systems), platypus, scorpions, shrews, spiders, toxicoferan reptiles (lizards and snakes), and sea anemones. The protein scaffolds utilized convergently have included AVIT/colipase/prokineticin, CAP,...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید