The most comprehensive review of reptile venoms on the market, this completely updated and greatly expanded handbook offers a "one-stop shop" to all those interested in the biology of venomous reptiles, the biochemistry and molecular biology of venoms, and the effects and treatment of human envenomation.
Auteur
Stephen P. Mackessy is Professor of Biology in the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Northern Colorado (UNC). His research broadly encompasses the biology of venomous snakes and the biochemistry of snake venoms, and he has published over one hundred scientific papers, book chapters, and natural history notes.
Texte du rabat
A decade after publication of the first edition, Handbook of Venoms and Toxins of Reptiles responds to extensive changes in the field of toxinology to endure as the most comprehensive review of reptile venoms on the market. The six sections of this new edition, which has nearly doubled in size, complement the original handbook by presenting current information from many of the leading researchers and physicians in toxinology, with topics ranging from functional morphology, evolution and ecology to crystallography, -omics technologies, drug discovery and more. With the recent recognition by the World Health Organization of snakebite as a neglected tropical disease, the section on snakebite has been expanded and includes several chapters dealing with the problem broadly and with new technologies and the promises these new approaches may hold to counter the deleterious effects of envenomation.
This greatly expanded handbook offers a unique resource for biologists, biochemists, toxicologists, physicians, clinicians, and epidemiologists, as well as informed laypersons interested in the biology of venomous reptiles, the biochemistry and molecular biology of venoms, and the effects and treatment of human envenomation.
Contenu
Preface
About the Editor
Contributors
Section I: Introduction and Technologies Used in Toxinology
Reptile venoms and toxins: Unlimited opportunities for basic and applied research - Stephen P. Mackessy
Present and future of snake venom proteomics profiling - Juan J. Calvete and Bruno Lomonte
Applications of genomics and related technologies for studying reptile venoms - Drew R. Schield, Blair W. Perry, Giulia I.M. Pasquesi, Richard W. Orton, Zachary L. Nikolakis, Aundrea K. Westfall, Todd A. Castoe
Snake venom gland transcriptomics - Cassandra M. Modahl and Rajeev Kungur Brahma
X-ray crystallography and structural studies of toxins - Vinícius Lucatelle da Silva, Ricardo Barros Mariutti, Mônika Aparecida Coronado, Raphael Josef Eberle, Fábio Rogério de Moraes and Raghuvir Krishnaswamy Arni
Envenomations and Treatment: Translating between the bench and the bedside - Nicklaus Brandehoff and Jordan Benjamin
Current assessment of the state of snake venom toxinological research with a view to the future - Sarah Natalie Cirilo Gimenes and Jay W. Fox
Section II: Venom Gland Structure, Systematics and Ecology
Reptile venom glands: Form, function, future, concepts and controversies - Scott A. Weinstein
Advances in venomous snake systematics, 2009-2019 - Wolfgang Wüster
Biochemical ecology of venomous snakes - Cara F. Smith and Stephen P. Mackessy
Resistance of native species to reptile venoms -- Danielle H. Drabeck
Section III: Reptile Venom Non-enzymatic Toxins
R. Manjunatha Kini
Myotoxin a, crotamine and defensin homologs in reptile venoms - Lucas C. Porta, Pedro Z. Amaral, Paulo Z. Amaral and Mirian A. F. Hayashi
Reptile venom disintegrins - Anthony J. Saviola and Juan J. Calvete
Reptile venom cysteine-rich secretory proteins - María Elisa Peichoto and Marcelo Larami Santoro
Bradykinin-potentiating and related peptides from reptile venoms - Daniel Carvalho Pimenta and Patrick Jack Spencer
Exendins and its related proteins - Michelle Khai Khun Yap and Nurhamimah Misuan
Reptile venom C-type-lectins - Kenneth J. Clemetson
Snake venom Kunitz-type inhibitors and cystatins - structure and function - Elda E. Sánchez, Emelyn Salazar, Montamas Suntravat and Francisco Torres
Small molecular constituents of snake venoms - Alejandro Villar-Briones and Steven D. Aird
Cobra venom factor: Structure, function, biology, research tool and drug lead - Carl-Wilhelm Vogel, Brian E. Hew and David C. Fritzinger
Snake toxins targeting diverse ion channels - Matan Geron and Avi Priel
Section IV: Reptile Venom Enzyme Toxins
and Francis S. Markland Jr.
Snake venom metalloproteinases - Charlotte A. Dawson, Stuart Ainsworth, Laura-Oana Albulescu and Nicholas R. Casewell
Snake venom matrix metalloproteinases (svMMPs): Alternative proteolytic enzymes in rear-fanged snake venoms - Inácio L. M. Junqueira-de-Azevedo and Juan David Bayona-Serrano
Snake venom phospholipase A2 toxins - Bruno Lomonte and Igor Krizaj
Reptile venom L-amino acid oxidases - structure and function - Juliana P. Zuliania, Mauro V. Paloschi, Adriana S. Pontes, Charles N. Boeno, Jéssica A. Lopes, Sulamita S. Setubal, Fernando B. Zanchi and Andreimar M. Soares
Snake venom nucleases, nucleotidases, and phosphomonoesterases - Jüri Siigur and Ene Siigur
Reptile venom acetylcholinesterases - Mushtaq Ahmed, Wasim Ahmad, Nadia Mushtaq,
Rehmat Ali Khan and Maria Rosa Chitolina Schetinger
Section V: Global Approaches to Envenomations and Treatments
Snakebite envenomation as a neglected tropical disease: new impetus for confronting an old scourge - José María Gutiérrez
Current industrial production of snake antivenoms - Mariángela Vargas, Melvin Sánchez, Andrés Hernández, Aarón Gómez, Mauricio Arguedas, Andrés Sánchez, Laura Sánchez, Mauren Villalta, María Herrera and Álvaro Segura
Antivenom in the age of recombinant DNA technology - Andreas H. Laustsen
Epidemiology and treatment of reptile envenomations in the United States - Daniel E. Keyler and Nicklaus Brandehoff
Envenomations by reptiles in México - Edgar Neri-Castro, Melisa Bénard-Valle, Jorge López de León, Leslie Boyer and Alejandro Alagón
Snakebite envenomation in Central America: Epidemiology, pathophysiology and treatment - José María Gutiérrez
Snakebite in Southeast Asia: Envenomation and clinical management- Nget Hong Tan, Kae Yi Tan and Choo Hock Tan
Snake envenomation: Therapy and challenges in India - Ashis K. Mukherjee, Bhargab Kalita, Sumita Dutta, Aparup Patra, Chitta R. Maiti and Dileep Punde
Snakebite in Africa: Current situation and urgent needs - Jean-Philippe Chippaux
Approaches to snake envenomation in Southern Africa - James Pattinson, George Oosthuizen, Colin R. Tilbury and Darryl Wood
Section VI: Reptile Venoms - Production and as a Source of Therapeutics
Large-scale snake colonies for venom production: Considerations and challenges - Kristen L. Wiley and James R. Harrison
Toxins to drugs - biochemistry and pharmacology - Zoltan Takacs