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A pharmacological solution for a conspecific conflict: ROS-mediated territorial aggression in sea anemones.
Toxicon. 2008 May; 51(6):1038-50.T

Abstract

Venomous organisms are usually resistant to their own venoms, and utilize mechanical behavioral means to resolve intra-specific conflicts, such as those occurring over territory, mates or social status. The present study deals with a venom apparatus, which has been specifically designed for conspecific aggression, by the aid of a unique pharmacology. Actinarian sea anemones such as Actinia equina utilize vesicular organs termed acrorhagi in order to deter conspecific territorial competitors. The territorial aggression was shown to be performed by the aid of acrorhagial cnidocysts, which inflict localized tissue necroses on the body of the approaching-threatening anemone. In view of the fact that sea anemones were shown to resist mechanical injuries and their own cytolytic, necrosis-inducing pore-forming substances-the above acrorhagial injuries are ambiguous. Using an electrical device to collect acrorhagial cnidocyst-derived venom, we have shown that the venom is devoid of paralytic-neurotoxic activity, contains heat denaturable hemolytic polypeptides of a low molecular weight and is capable of inducing intracellular formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) upon medium application to various cultured cells. The ROS formation phenomenon provides a reasonable pharmacological solution to the, above-mentioned, paradoxical conspecific self-intoxication by triggering a preexisting global endogenous mechanism of oxygen toxicity common to aerobic organisms.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Biophysics, University of Lodz, Banacha 12/16, 90237 Lodz, Poland.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18353415

Citation

Bartosz, Grzegorz, et al. "A Pharmacological Solution for a Conspecific Conflict: ROS-mediated Territorial Aggression in Sea Anemones." Toxicon : Official Journal of the International Society On Toxinology, vol. 51, no. 6, 2008, pp. 1038-50.
Bartosz G, Finkelshtein A, Przygodzki T, et al. A pharmacological solution for a conspecific conflict: ROS-mediated territorial aggression in sea anemones. Toxicon. 2008;51(6):1038-50.
Bartosz, G., Finkelshtein, A., Przygodzki, T., Bsor, T., Nesher, N., Sher, D., & Zlotkin, E. (2008). A pharmacological solution for a conspecific conflict: ROS-mediated territorial aggression in sea anemones. Toxicon : Official Journal of the International Society On Toxinology, 51(6), 1038-50. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.toxicon.2008.01.017
Bartosz G, et al. A Pharmacological Solution for a Conspecific Conflict: ROS-mediated Territorial Aggression in Sea Anemones. Toxicon. 2008;51(6):1038-50. PubMed PMID: 18353415.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - A pharmacological solution for a conspecific conflict: ROS-mediated territorial aggression in sea anemones. AU - Bartosz,Grzegorz, AU - Finkelshtein,Alin, AU - Przygodzki,Tomasz, AU - Bsor,Tamar, AU - Nesher,Nir, AU - Sher,Daniel, AU - Zlotkin,Eliahu, Y1 - 2008/02/08/ PY - 2007/09/11/received PY - 2008/01/19/revised PY - 2008/01/28/accepted PY - 2008/3/21/pubmed PY - 2008/8/1/medline PY - 2008/3/21/entrez SP - 1038 EP - 50 JF - Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology JO - Toxicon VL - 51 IS - 6 N2 - Venomous organisms are usually resistant to their own venoms, and utilize mechanical behavioral means to resolve intra-specific conflicts, such as those occurring over territory, mates or social status. The present study deals with a venom apparatus, which has been specifically designed for conspecific aggression, by the aid of a unique pharmacology. Actinarian sea anemones such as Actinia equina utilize vesicular organs termed acrorhagi in order to deter conspecific territorial competitors. The territorial aggression was shown to be performed by the aid of acrorhagial cnidocysts, which inflict localized tissue necroses on the body of the approaching-threatening anemone. In view of the fact that sea anemones were shown to resist mechanical injuries and their own cytolytic, necrosis-inducing pore-forming substances-the above acrorhagial injuries are ambiguous. Using an electrical device to collect acrorhagial cnidocyst-derived venom, we have shown that the venom is devoid of paralytic-neurotoxic activity, contains heat denaturable hemolytic polypeptides of a low molecular weight and is capable of inducing intracellular formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) upon medium application to various cultured cells. The ROS formation phenomenon provides a reasonable pharmacological solution to the, above-mentioned, paradoxical conspecific self-intoxication by triggering a preexisting global endogenous mechanism of oxygen toxicity common to aerobic organisms. SN - 0041-0101 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18353415/A_pharmacological_solution_for_a_conspecific_conflict:_ROS_mediated_territorial_aggression_in_sea_anemones_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -