Abstract

Three piscivorous Conus species, C. ermineus, C. consor and C. catus were acclimatized in aquaria. The study of their strategy to capture the prey and details of their radula's morphology revealed that all of them used a `hook and line' strategy which consists of immobilizing the prey rapidly before engulfing it. The venoms from these piscivorous species clearly elicit, when injected into fish, an excitotoxic shock characterized by a sudden tetanus of the prey. In mammals, the venoms induce both flaccid paralysis via i.p. injection and seizures via i.c.v. injection. Intracellular recordings from frog nerve-muscle preparations revealed that the venoms from these Conus species first caused spontaneous synaptic potentials which in turn triggered muscle action potentials. Such spontaneous activity is due to an increased nerve terminal excitability. In addition, the venoms suppressed neuromuscular transmission probably by blocking postsynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. No direct effect of these Conus venoms was observed on the membrane of skeletal muscle fibres. In conclusion, C. ermineus, C. consor and C. catus, which have not securely tethered their prey used a mixture of toxins which target both pre-and postsynaptic elements of the neuromuscular junction and which produce rapid immobilization of their prey.

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