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Predation spider venoms

Turning now to chemical attack, many predators immobilize their prey by injecting toxins, often neurotoxins, into them. Examples include venomous snakes, spiders, and scorpions. Some spider toxins (Quick and Usherwood 1990 Figure 1.3) are neurotoxic through antagonistic action upon glutamate receptors. The venom of some scorpions contains polypeptide neurotoxins that bind to the sodium channel. [Pg.11]

Bacteria, protozoa, and venomous animals synthesize numerous toxins that are used to kill their prey or to defend themselves. Sea anemones, jellyfish, cone snails, insects, spiders, scorpions, and snakes all make potent and highly specific neurotoxins. Plants form a host of alkaloids and other specialized products, some of which are specifically neurotoxic and able to deter predators. More than 500 species of marine cone snails of the genus Conus synthesize a vast array of polypeptide toxins (conotoxins), 487-489 some with unusual posttranslational modifications.490 491 The slow-moving snails are voracious predators that use their toxins, which they inject with a disposible harpoonlike tooth,492 to paralyze fish, molluscs, or worms.493... [Pg.1775]

Some static or slow animals, both terrestrial (snakes, spiders) and marine (snails), have developed venoms containing potent neurotoxins to capture their prey with high efQciency and speed. The efQciency of the method used to capture the prey will influence the venom content evolved by a predator. [Pg.109]


See other pages where Predation spider venoms is mentioned: [Pg.293]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.296]    [Pg.357]    [Pg.511]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.34 , Pg.35 ]




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