Journal article

Understanding and utilising mammalian venom via a platypus venom transcriptome

CM Whittington, JMS Koh, WC Warren, AT Papenfuss, AM Torres, PW Kuchel, K Belov

Journal of Proteomics | ELSEVIER | Published : 2009

Abstract

Only five mammalian species are known to be venomous, and while a large amount of research has been carried out on reptile venom, mammalian venom has been poorly studied to date. Here we describe the status of current research into the venom of the platypus, a semi-aquatic egg-laying Australian mammal, and discuss our approach to platypus venom transcriptomics. We propose that such construction and analysis of mammalian venom transcriptomes from small samples of venom gland, in tandem with proteomics studies, will allow the identification of the full range of mammalian venom components. Functional studies and pharmacological evaluation of the identified toxins will then lay the foundations f..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Tom Grant for valuable discussions and advice. We also thank Pararnjit Bansal for his assistance and Dominic Geraghty, Erin Noonan, and the Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries and Water for provision of opportunistically collected platypus samples. This work was funded by a University of Sydney Research and Development Award to KB and an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant to PK. CW and JK are supported by Australian Postgraduate Awards.