Issue 12, 2017

Pharmacology of predatory and defensive venom peptides in cone snails

Abstract

Cone snails are predatory gastropods whose neurotoxic venom peptides (conotoxins) have been extensively studied for pharmacological probes, venom evolution mechanisms and potential therapeutics. Conotoxins have a wide range of structural and functional classes that continue to undergo accelerated evolution that underlies the rapid expansion of the genus over their short evolutionary history. A number of pharmacological classes, driven by separately evolved defensive and predatory venoms, have been hypothesised to facilitate shifts in prey that exemplify the adaptability of cone snails. Here we provide an overview of these pharmacological families and discuss their ecological roles and evolutionary impact.

Graphical abstract: Pharmacology of predatory and defensive venom peptides in cone snails

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
06 Sep 2017
Accepted
25 Oct 2017
First published
01 Nov 2017

Mol. BioSyst., 2017,13, 2453-2465

Pharmacology of predatory and defensive venom peptides in cone snails

J. R. Prashanth, S. Dutertre and R. J. Lewis, Mol. BioSyst., 2017, 13, 2453 DOI: 10.1039/C7MB00511C

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