Included among the more than 300 species of elapid snakes worldwide is the Australian genus Demansia, or whip snakes. Despite evidence to suggest adverse clinical outcomes from envenomation by these snakes, together with confusion on their true phylogenetic relationship to other Australian elapids, not a single toxin sequence has previously been reported from the venom of a Demansia species. We describe here a combined proteomic and transcriptomic approach characterizing the venom from the black whip snake, Demansia vestigiata. A total of 13 distinct toxin families were identified, including homologues of all of the major toxic components previously reported from the venom of other Australian elapids, such as factor X-like prothrombin activ...
Snake venoms have been subjected to increasingly sensitive analyses for well over 100 years, but mos...
Rear-fanged and aglyphous snakes are usually considered not dangerous to humans because of their lim...
International audienceSnake envenomations constitute a worldwide neglected tropical disease, with th...
Snake venoms are a complex mixture of polypeptide and other molecules that adversely affect multiple...
Artículo de publicación ISIPhilodryas chamissonis is a rear-fanged snake endemic to Chile. Its bite ...
Artículo de publicación ISIPhilodryas chamissonis is a rear-fanged snake endemic to Chile. Its bite ...
Despite the unparalleled diversity of venomous snakes in Australia, research has concentrated on a h...
Despite the unparalleled diversity of venomous snakes in Australia, research has concentrated on a h...
Venom from the Australian elapid Pseudonaja textilis (Common or Eastern Brown snake), is the second ...
Australian elapid venom remains an under-investigated resource of novel bioactive peptides. In this ...
Variation in venom composition is a ubiquitous phenomenon in snakes and occurs both interspecificall...
Australian terrestrial elapid snakes contain amongst the most potently toxic venoms known. However, ...
Advances in the last decade combining transcriptomics with established proteomics methods have made ...
Pseudechis (black snakes) is an Australasian elapid snake genus that inhabits much of mainland Austr...
Advances in the last decade combining transcriptomics with established proteomics methods have made ...
Snake venoms have been subjected to increasingly sensitive analyses for well over 100 years, but mos...
Rear-fanged and aglyphous snakes are usually considered not dangerous to humans because of their lim...
International audienceSnake envenomations constitute a worldwide neglected tropical disease, with th...
Snake venoms are a complex mixture of polypeptide and other molecules that adversely affect multiple...
Artículo de publicación ISIPhilodryas chamissonis is a rear-fanged snake endemic to Chile. Its bite ...
Artículo de publicación ISIPhilodryas chamissonis is a rear-fanged snake endemic to Chile. Its bite ...
Despite the unparalleled diversity of venomous snakes in Australia, research has concentrated on a h...
Despite the unparalleled diversity of venomous snakes in Australia, research has concentrated on a h...
Venom from the Australian elapid Pseudonaja textilis (Common or Eastern Brown snake), is the second ...
Australian elapid venom remains an under-investigated resource of novel bioactive peptides. In this ...
Variation in venom composition is a ubiquitous phenomenon in snakes and occurs both interspecificall...
Australian terrestrial elapid snakes contain amongst the most potently toxic venoms known. However, ...
Advances in the last decade combining transcriptomics with established proteomics methods have made ...
Pseudechis (black snakes) is an Australasian elapid snake genus that inhabits much of mainland Austr...
Advances in the last decade combining transcriptomics with established proteomics methods have made ...
Snake venoms have been subjected to increasingly sensitive analyses for well over 100 years, but mos...
Rear-fanged and aglyphous snakes are usually considered not dangerous to humans because of their lim...
International audienceSnake envenomations constitute a worldwide neglected tropical disease, with th...