Publication | Closed Access
Venomous auger snail <i>Hastula</i> (<i>Impages</i>) <i>hectica</i> (Linnaeus, 1758): molecular phylogeny, foregut anatomy and comparative toxinology
43
Citations
19
References
2007
Year
BiologyMyriapodaMorphological EvidencePhylogeneticsForegut AnatomyToxinologyNatural SciencesHastula Venom PeptideEvolutionary BiologyComparative ToxinologyMolecular PhylogenyMolecular BiologyCone SnailsVenomicsSymbiosisConus Peptide Toxins
The >10,000 living venomous marine snail species [superfamily Conoidea (Fleming, 1822)] include cone snails (Conus), the overwhelming focus of research. Hastula hectica (Linnaeus, 1758), a venomous snail in the family Terebridae (Mörch, 1852) was comprehensively investigated. The Terebridae comprise a major monophyletic group within Conoidea. H. hectica has a striking radular tooth to inject venom that looks like a perforated spear; in Conus, the tooth looks like a hypodermic needle. H. hectica venom contains a large complement of small disulfide-rich peptides, but with no apparent overlap with Conus in gene superfamilies expressed. Although Conus peptide toxins are densely post-translationally modified, no post-translationally modified amino acids were found in any Hastula venom peptide. The results suggest that different major lineages of venomous molluscs have strikingly divergent toxinological and venom-delivery strategies.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1