Abstract

A large number of humans are stung by jellyfish all over the world. The stings cause acute pain followed by persistent pain and local inflammation. Harmful jellyfish species typically cause strong pain, whereas harmless jellyfish cause subtle or no pain. Jellyfish sting humans by injecting a tubule, contained in the nematocyst, the stinging organ of jellyfish. The tubule penetrates into the skin leading to venom injection. The detailed morphology of the nematocyst tubule and molecular structure of the venom in the nematocyst has been reported; however, the mechanism responsible for the difference in pain that is caused by harmful and harmless jellyfish sting has not yet been explored or explained. Therefore, we hypothesized that differences in the length of the nematocyst tubule leads to different degrees of epithelial damage. The initial acute pain might be generated by penetration of the tubule, which stimulates pain receptor neurons, whilst persistent pain might be caused by injection of venom into the epithelium. To test this hypothesis we compared the lengths of discharged nematocyst tubules from harmful and harmless jellyfish species and evaluated their ability to penetrate human skin. The results showed that the harmful jellyfish species, Chrysaora pacifica, Carybdea brevipedalia, and Chironex yamaguchii, causing moderate to severe pain, have nematocyst tubules longer than 200 μm, compared with a jellyfish species that cause little or no pain, Aurelia aurita. The majority of the tubules of harmful jellyfishes, C. yamaguchii and C. brevipedalia, were sufficiently long to penetrate the human epidermis and physically stimulate the free nerve endings of Aδ pain receptor fibers around plexuses to cause acute pain and inject the venom into the human skin epithelium to cause persistent pain and inflammation.

Highlights

  • Jellyfish are classified as a member of the phylum Cnidaria

  • Comparison of the numbers of nematocysts where the tubule length was longer than 100 μm and 200μm revealed widespread differences in the numbers of nematocyst tubules in both size ranges by one-way ANOVA (F(3,8) = 5.9, p

  • In the nematocyst tubules that were longer than 200 μm, the harmless species, A. aurita and C. pacifica, were different from the harmful species, C. yamaguchii and C. brevipedalia (p

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Summary

Introduction

Jellyfish are classified as a member of the phylum Cnidaria. All cnidarians have a stinging cell, cnidocyte, and its stinging organelle nematocysts. Jellyfish with Painful Sting Have Longer Nematocyst Tubules [2]. When a jellyfish tentacle touches the skin of other animals, the nematocyst discharges the tubule to sting the skin of the animal and inject the venom into its skin tissue. Stings by some venomous jellyfish species are painful, whereas some from harmless jellyfish species cause subtle or no pain when they contact human skin. We propose that the acute pain experienced following a jellyfish sting might be generated by tubule penetration, which stimulates pain receptor neurons. In such cases, deeper penetration with longer tubules induces more severe pain. To test this hypothesis, we compared the lengths of the discharged nematocyst tubules from harmful and harmless jellyfish species from Japanese coastal waters

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