Herzig Volker
Institute for Molecular Bioscience, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia QLD 4072, Australia.
Toxicon. 2019 Feb;158:33-37. doi: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2018.11.312. Epub 2018 Nov 27.
The millions of extant arthropod species are testament to their evolutionary success that can at least partially be attributed to venom usage, which evolved independently in at least 19 arthropod lineages. While some arthropods primarily use venom for predation (e.g., spiders and centipedes) or defense (e.g., bees and caterpillars), it can also have more specialised functions (e.g. in parasitoid wasps to paralyse arthropods for their brood to feed on) or even a combination of functions (e.g. the scorpion Parabuthus transvaalicus can deliver a prevenom for predator deterrence and a venom for predation). Most arthropod venoms are complex cocktails of water, salts, small bioactive molecules, peptides, enzymes and larger proteins, with peptides usually comprising the majority of toxins. Some spider venoms have been reported to contain >1000 peptide toxins, which function as combinatorial libraries to provide an evolutionary advantage. The astounding diversity of venomous arthropods multiplied by their enormous toxin arsenals results in an almost infinite resource for novel bioactive molecules. The main challenge for exploiting this resource is the small size of most arthropods, which can be a limitation for current venom extraction techniques. Fortunately, recent decades have seen an incredible improvement in transcriptomic and proteomic techniques that have provided increasing sensitivity while reducing sample requirements. In turn, this has provided a much larger variety of arthropod venom compounds for potential applications such as therapeutics, molecular probes for basic research, bioinsecticides or anti-parasitic drugs. This special issue of Toxicon aims to cover the breadth of arthropod venom research, including toxin evolution, pharmacology, toxin discovery and characterisation, toxin structures, clinical aspects, and potential applications.
现存的数百万种节肢动物物种证明了它们进化上的成功,这至少部分归因于毒液的使用,毒液在至少19个节肢动物谱系中独立进化。虽然一些节肢动物主要将毒液用于捕食(如蜘蛛和蜈蚣)或防御(如蜜蜂和毛虫),但它也可以有更特殊的功能(如在寄生蜂中使节肢动物麻痹以供其幼虫食用),甚至是多种功能的组合(如南非金蝎可以分泌一种预防毒液来威慑捕食者,以及一种用于捕食的毒液)。大多数节肢动物毒液是由水、盐、小生物活性分子、肽、酶和较大蛋白质组成的复杂混合物,其中肽通常占毒素的大部分。据报道,一些蜘蛛毒液含有超过1000种肽毒素,它们作为组合文库发挥作用,提供进化优势。有毒节肢动物的惊人多样性乘以它们庞大的毒素库,产生了几乎无限的新型生物活性分子资源。开发这一资源的主要挑战是大多数节肢动物体型小,这可能是当前毒液提取技术的一个限制。幸运的是,近几十年来,转录组学和蛋白质组学技术有了令人难以置信的进步,在降低样品需求的同时提高了灵敏度。反过来,这为潜在应用提供了更多种类的节肢动物毒液化合物,如治疗药物、基础研究的分子探针、生物杀虫剂或抗寄生虫药物。《毒素学》的这一特刊旨在涵盖节肢动物毒液研究的广度,包括毒素进化、药理学、毒素发现与表征、毒素结构、临床方面以及潜在应用。