Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

A Novel Protein Toxin from the Deadly Box Jellyfish (Sea Wasp, Habu-kurage) Chiropsalmus quadrigatus

2002; Oxford University Press; Volume: 66; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1271/bbb.66.97

ISSN

1347-6947

Autores

Hiroshi Nagai, Kyoko Takuwa‐Kuroda, Masahiro Nakao, Naomasa Oshiro, Setsuko Iwanaga, Terumi Nakajima,

Tópico(s)

Venomous Animal Envenomation and Studies

Resumo

The deadly box jellyfish (Sea Wasp, Habu-kurage in Japanese) Chiropsalmus quadrigatus Haeckel (Cubozoa) is distributed widely in the tropical Pacific region. In Japan, three fatal cases due to stings from this species have been reported officially. We successfully isolated C. quadrigatus toxin-A (CqTX-A, 44 kDa), a major proteinaceous toxin, for the first time, from the nematocysts of C. quadrigatus. CqTX-A showed lethal toxicity to crayfish when administered via intraperitoneal injection (LD50 = 80 microg/kg) and hemolytic activity toward 0.8% sheep red blood cells (ED50 = 160 ng/ml). Furthermore, we sequenced the cDNA encoding CqTX-A. The deduced amino acid sequence of CqTX-A (462 amino acids) showed 25.2% and 21.6% sequence similarity to Carybdea rastoni toxins (CrTXs) and Carybdea alata toxin-A (CrTX-A), respectively, which are Cubozoan jellyfish toxins.

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