Journal article

Stingray Venom Proteins: Mechanisms of Action Revealed Using a Novel Network Pharmacology Approach


Authors listKirchhoff, KN; Billion, A; Voolstra, CR; Kremb, S; Wilke, T; Vilcinskas, A

Publication year2022

JournalMarine Drugs

Volume number20

Issue number1

eISSN1660-3397

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3390/md20010027

PublisherMDPI


Abstract
Animal venoms offer a valuable source of potent new drug leads, but their mechanisms of action are largely unknown. We therefore developed a novel network pharmacology approach based on multi-omics functional data integration to predict how stingray venom disrupts the physiological systems of target animals. We integrated 10 million transcripts from five stingray venom transcriptomes and 848,640 records from three high-content venom bioactivity datasets into a large functional data network. The network featured 216 signaling pathways, 29 of which were shared and targeted by 70 transcripts and 70 bioactivity hits. The network revealed clusters for single envenomation outcomes, such as pain, cardiotoxicity and hemorrhage. We carried out a detailed analysis of the pain cluster representing a primary envenomation symptom, revealing bibrotoxin and cholecystotoxin-like transcripts encoding pain-inducing candidate proteins in stingray venom. The cluster also suggested that such pain-inducing toxins primarily activate the inositol-3-phosphate receptor cascade, inducing intracellular calcium release. We also found strong evidence for synergistic activity among these candidates, with nerve growth factors cooperating with the most abundant translationally-controlled tumor proteins to activate pain signaling pathways. Our network pharmacology approach, here applied to stingray venom, can be used as a template for drug discovery in neglected venomous species.



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Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKirchhoff, K., Billion, A., Voolstra, C., Kremb, S., Wilke, T. and Vilcinskas, A. (2022) Stingray Venom Proteins: Mechanisms of Action Revealed Using a Novel Network Pharmacology Approach, Marine Drugs, 20(1), Article 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/md20010027

APA Citation styleKirchhoff, K., Billion, A., Voolstra, C., Kremb, S., Wilke, T., & Vilcinskas, A. (2022). Stingray Venom Proteins: Mechanisms of Action Revealed Using a Novel Network Pharmacology Approach. Marine Drugs. 20(1), Article 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/md20010027


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:35