Spider venoms represent an incredible source of biologically active substances which selectively target a variety of vital physiological functions in both insects and mammals. Many toxins isolated from spider venoms have been invaluable in helping to determine the role and diversity of neuronal ion channels and the process of exocytosis. In addition, there is enormous potential for the use of insect specific toxins from animal sources in agriculture. For these reasons, the past 15–20 years has seen a dramatic increase in studies on the venoms of many animals, particularly scorpions and spiders. This review covers the pharmacological and biochemical activities of spider venoms and the nature of the active components. In particular, it focuse...
Venoms from marine and terrestrial animals (cone snails, scorpions, spiders, snakes, centipedes, cni...
Spiders from the family Theraphosidae are typically generalist predators of both invertebrates and v...
Arthropod pests adversely affect humans by destroying a significant amount of the world\u27s food su...
Spider venom peptides and protein toxins are recognized as highly potent and specific molecular tool...
Venomous animals use a highly complex cocktails of proteins, peptides and small molecules to subdue ...
Spider venom is an intricate combination of target specific enzymatic and non-enzymatic toxins. In a...
This review on all spider venom components known by the end of 2010 bases on 1618 records for venom ...
Spiders and scorpions are notorious for their fearful dispositions and their ability to inject venom...
Insecticidal toxins derived from insect predators and parasitoids are of growing interest in the dev...
Spiders are the most successful venomous animals and the most abundant terrestrial predators. Their ...
Pest insect species are a burden to humans as they destroy crops and serve as vectors for a wide ran...
Over 10,000 arthropod species are currently considered to be pest organisms. They are estimated to c...
Background Venomous animals incapacitate their prey using complex venoms that can contain hundreds o...
In millions of years, spiders have optimized their venoms in order to assure successful prey capture...
Thousands of arthropod species, ranging from arachnids (spiders and scorpions) to hymenopterans (ant...
Venoms from marine and terrestrial animals (cone snails, scorpions, spiders, snakes, centipedes, cni...
Spiders from the family Theraphosidae are typically generalist predators of both invertebrates and v...
Arthropod pests adversely affect humans by destroying a significant amount of the world\u27s food su...
Spider venom peptides and protein toxins are recognized as highly potent and specific molecular tool...
Venomous animals use a highly complex cocktails of proteins, peptides and small molecules to subdue ...
Spider venom is an intricate combination of target specific enzymatic and non-enzymatic toxins. In a...
This review on all spider venom components known by the end of 2010 bases on 1618 records for venom ...
Spiders and scorpions are notorious for their fearful dispositions and their ability to inject venom...
Insecticidal toxins derived from insect predators and parasitoids are of growing interest in the dev...
Spiders are the most successful venomous animals and the most abundant terrestrial predators. Their ...
Pest insect species are a burden to humans as they destroy crops and serve as vectors for a wide ran...
Over 10,000 arthropod species are currently considered to be pest organisms. They are estimated to c...
Background Venomous animals incapacitate their prey using complex venoms that can contain hundreds o...
In millions of years, spiders have optimized their venoms in order to assure successful prey capture...
Thousands of arthropod species, ranging from arachnids (spiders and scorpions) to hymenopterans (ant...
Venoms from marine and terrestrial animals (cone snails, scorpions, spiders, snakes, centipedes, cni...
Spiders from the family Theraphosidae are typically generalist predators of both invertebrates and v...
Arthropod pests adversely affect humans by destroying a significant amount of the world\u27s food su...