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科学美国人60秒:Snail's Venom Puts Fish in Insulin Coma

2015-01-27来源:scientificamerican

It may not be the legendary matchup squid vs octopus, but imagine this fight: sea-dwelling cone snail versus tiny fish! Who wins? Well, true, the fish can dart away. But the snail has chemical weapons. "So they use a whole cocktail of compounds and most of them are neurotoxins and they just completely wipe out the prey's physiology, right, so they prey cannot respond anymore."

Helena Safavi, a biologist at the University of Utah. She and her colleagues discovered that the cone snail's venom contains not only neurotoxins, but insulin, too—which the snail's prey take in through their gills. And that insulin overdose causes the fish's blood sugar to plummet, depriving its brain of energy, and inducing a coma.

"And that's what happens when you give people an insulin overdose—you can cause coma and then death depending on the amount of insulin." They report the findings in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [Helena Safavi-Hemami et al, Specialized insulin is used for chemical warfare by fish-hunting cone snails]

If this all sounds like something out of a murder mystery… well, it is. The paper actually cites the Claus von Bülow trials in the 1980s.