Coral snake venoms: mode of action and pathophysiology of experimental envenomation

Authors

  • Oswald Vital Brazil State University of Campinas; Department of Pharmacology; Faculty of Medical Sciences

Keywords:

Coral snake venoms, Neuromuscular junction, Postsynaptic action, Presynaptic action, Cardiotoxin-like action, Neostigmine antagonistic effect

Abstract

Coral snakes, the New World Elapidae, are included in the genera Micniroides and Micrurus. The genus Mlcrurus comprises nearly all coral snake species and those which are responsible for human snake-bite accidents. The following generalizations concerning the effects induced by their venoms, and their venom-properties can be made. Coral snake venoms are neurotoxic, producing loss of muscle strenght and death by respiratory paralysis. Local edema and necrosis are not induced nor blood coagulation or hemorrhages. Proteolysis activity is absent or of very low grade. They display phospholipase A2 activity. Nephrotoxic effects are not evoked. The main toxins from elapid venoms are postsynaptic and presynaptic neurotoxins and cardiotoxins. Phospholipases A2 endowed with myonecrotic or cardiotoxin-like properties are important toxic components from some elapid venoms. The mode of action of Micrurus frontalis, M. lemniscatus, M. corallinus and M. fulvius venoms has been investigated in isolated muscle preparations and is here discussed. It is shown that while M. frontalis and M. lemniscatus venoms must contain only neurotoxins that act at the cholinergic end-plate receptor (postsynaptic neurotoxins), M. corallinus venom also inhibits evoked acetylcholine release by the motor nerve endings (presynaptic neurotoxin-like effect) and M. fulvius induces muscle fiber membrane depolarization (cardiotoxin-like effect). The effects produced by M. corallinus and M. fulvius venoms in vivo in dogs and M. frontalis venom in dogs and monkeys are also reported.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

1987-06-01

Issue

Section

Review

How to Cite

Brazil, O. V. (1987). Coral snake venoms: mode of action and pathophysiology of experimental envenomation . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 29(3), 119-126. https://www.revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/28504