Abstract

Many marine mollusks attain or increase their predatory efficiency using complex chemical secretions, which are often produced and delivered through specialized anatomical structures of the foregut. The secretions produced in venom glands of Conus snails and allies have been extensively studied, revealing an amazing chemical diversity of small, highly constrained neuropeptides, whose characterization led to significant pharmacological developments. Conversely, salivary glands, the other main secretory structures of molluscan foregut, have been neglected despite their shared occurrence in the two lineages including predatory members: Gastropoda and Cephalopoda. Over the last few years, the interest for the chemistry of salivary mixtures increased based on their potential biomedical applications. Recent investigation with -omics technologies are complementing the classical biochemical descriptions, that date back to the 1950s, highlighting the high level of diversification of salivary secretions in predatory mollusks, and suggesting they can be regarded as a pharmaceutical cornucopia. As with other animal venoms, some of the salivary toxins are reported to target, for example, sodium and/or potassium ion channels or receptors and transporters for neurotransmitters such as, glutamate, serotonin, neurotensin, and noradrenaline, thus manipulating the neuromuscular system of the preys. Other bioactive components possess anticoagulant, anesthetic and hypotensive activities. Here, we overview available knowledge on the salivary glands of key predatory molluscan taxa, gastropods, and cephalopods, summarizing their anatomical, physiological and biochemical complexity in order to facilitate future comparative studies on main evolutionary trends and functional convergence in the acquisition of successful predatory strategies.

Highlights

  • Predation is a complex habit involving morphological, physiological, neural, and behavioral adaptations

  • According to the most recent reconstruction of evolutionary relationships of Molluscs (Smith et al, 2011), gastropods and cephalopods are paraphyletic, implying that a predatory lifestyle was independently acquired in these two welldiversified lineages

  • Cephalopods share a common arrangement, with a great uniformity in all the Coleoidea so far studied and minor variations in Nautilus, congruently with the hypothesis that a carnivorous or predatory lifestyle is an ancestral characteristic of the group

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Predation is a complex habit involving morphological, physiological, neural, and behavioral adaptations. Cephalopods are all carnivorous, coleoids being macrophagous predators, and Nautilus a scavenger They emerged as predators since their major diversification event in middle-upper Paleozoic (Kröger et al, 2011) and evolved sophisticated techniques to search, capture, and kill their preys. Both in Gastropods and in Cephalopods the physiology and sensory abilities allow the animals to seek diverse preys through a variety of feeding behaviors and predatory strategies (Hanlon and Messenger, 1996; Rodhouse and Nigmatullin, 1996; Modica and Holford, 2010). We summarize the available knowledge on salivary glands and their specialization in gastropods and cephalopods, in order to offer a framework to further detailed comparative studies aiming to elucidate how successful predatory strategies emerged in different molluscan lineages

MORPHOLOGY AND ORGANIZATION OF THE SALIVARY GLANDS
PHYSIOLOGY OF THE SALIVARY GLANDS
BIOCHEMICAL COMPLEXITY OF SALIVARY SECRETIONS
Other enzymes
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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