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Scorpion Venom: Biology, Chemistry, and Medical Impact
Evolution and Function
Scorpion venom is a biological weapon refined over 400 million years for prey capture and defense. Produced in a pair of venom glands in the telson, the venom is injected through the stinger during a strike. Most scorpions use venom primarily to immobilize insects, but species in the family Buthidae produce toxins potent enough to affect vertebrate nervous systems. For humans, envenomation is an accidental interaction, yet it results in over 1.2 million stings and several thousand deaths annually, mostly in tropical and subtropical regions.
Chemical Composition
Scorpion venom is a complex mixture dominated by low-molecular-weight peptides, with smaller amounts of enzymes, nucleotides, and inorganic salts. The peptides are the main toxic agents and are highly specific for ion channels.
1. Neurotoxins targeting sodium channels: These are the most studied components in dangerous species like Androctonus, Leiurus, and Centruroides. Alpha and beta toxins bind to different sites on voltage-gated Na⁺ channels, preventing normal inactivation. The result is prolonged depolarization, excessive neurotransmitter release, and an autonomic storm.
2. Potassium and calcium channel toxins: Short peptides block K⁺ and Ca²⁺ channels, disrupting repolarization and calcium signaling. These contribute to prolonged action potentials and altered muscle and nerve function.
3. Enzymes and ancillary factors: Hyaluronidases, phospholipases, and proteases facilitate venom spread and amplify local inflammation. Some venoms also contain antimicrobial peptides that may protect the scorpion from infection.
Non-buthid scorpions, such as those in the Scorpionidae family, have venom with low toxicity to humans, causing mainly local pain.
