Monday, 24 February 2014

Spider Venom As Pain Killer

Today's post from news.yale.edu (see link below) is another article looking at the potential benefits of insect venom in the treatment of chronic pain. This time it concerns a particular South American spider, whose venom blocks activity in pain transmitting nerve cells. The idea is to find something that blocks pain signals in the channels along which they travel and this is by no means the first look at creature poison as a means of doing this. Unfortunately, as with so many other studies, that's all they are...studies, with no production date in sight and that can be very frustrating for the patient. That said, one or more of these studies must lead to positive results eventually and then we can all benefit but until then, it's interesting to read about which directions scientists are taking.


Within tarantula venom, new hope for safe and novel painkillers found 
By Bill Hathaway February 13, 2014

Screening more than 100 spider toxins, Yale researchers identified a protein from the venom of the Peruvian green velvet tarantula that blunts activity in pain-transmitting neurons. The findings, reported in the March 3 issue of the journal Current Biology, show the new screening method used by the scientists has the potential to search millions of different spider toxins for safe pain-killing drugs and therapies.

The researchers note that they tested the spider toxins on only one of a dozen suspected human pain channels.

“The likelihood is that within the vast diversity of spider toxins we will find others that are active against other channels important for pain,” said Michael Nitabach, associate professor of cellular and molecular physiology and of genetics, and senior author of the paper.

The researchers screened the toxins from a variety of tarantula species to find one that blocked TRPA1, an ion channel on the surface of pain-sensing neurons that is implicated in inflammation and neuropathic pain.

In a process dubbed toxineering by the Yale researchers, the team generated another small library of mutated versions of the tarantula toxin to find one that blocked TRPA1 but had no effect on activity of other channels on the surface of neurons.

“The beauty of the system is we can also screen engineered toxins not found in nature, and identify higher-potency and more specific molecular variants that lack deleterious effects on essential nerve functions,’’ Nitabach said.

His lab plans to ramp up efforts to test tens of thousands of new toxins for similar biological activity against pain-sensing neurons.

Junhong Gui and Boyi Liu of Yale are co-lead authors of the study, which was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

http://news.yale.edu/2014/02/13/within-tarantula-venom-new-hope-safe-and-novel-painkillers-found

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