Conus omaria

University of Utah researchers isolated an unusual nerve toxin in an ocean-dwelling snail, and say its ability to glom onto the brain’s nicotine receptors may be useful for designing new drugs to treat a variety of psychiatric and brain diseases.

“We discovered a new toxin from a venomous cone snail that may enable scientists to more effectively develop medications for a wide range of nervous system disorders including Parkinson”s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, depression, nicotine addiction and perhaps even schizophrenia,” says J. Michael McIntosh.

McIntosh says the OmIA toxin will be useful in designing new medicines because it fits like a key into certain lock-like “nicotinic acetylcholine receptors” found on nerve cells in the brain and the rest of the nervous system.

“Those are the same types of receptors you activate if you smoke a cigarette,” he says, explaining that nicotine in cigarette smoke “binds” to the receptor to trigger the release of a neurotransmitter, which is a chemical that carries a nerve impulse from one nerve cell to another, allowing nerve cells to communicate.

McIntosh says the new toxin itself is unlikely to become a drug because it blocks rather than stimulates nicotinic receptors. But because it can act on some types of nicotinic receptors and not others – like a key that opens some locks but not others – it has great potential as a tool for precisely identifying the shape and structure of the receptor “locks,” thus making it easier to design new medicines or “keys” to fit those receptors and trigger them to release desired neurotransmitters.

The article has a great deal of information and insight. This is the kind of research that might offer significant benefits to society — after a lifetime of dedication.

McIntosh is the same University of Utah researcher who – as an incoming freshman student in 1979 – discovered another “conotoxin” that was developed into Prialt, a drug injected into fluid surrounding the spinal cord to treat severe pain due to cancer, AIDS, injury, failed back surgery and certain nervous system disorders. Prialt was approved in late 2004 in the United States and was introduced in Europe last month.



  1. Matt H says:

    this is the result of brain damage:

    [editor: read comment guidelines]

  2. Mike Voice says:

    Can we hijack this science thread into one on evolution & design?

    Let’s try!

    [sarcasm]

    There is no logical reason for a conesnail to evolve this toxin, so it must have been designed for us to find – when we had advanced far enough…

    [/sarcasm]

    With my wife recovering from her 2nd back/spine surgery – due to chronic pain – I am amazed and happy that there is some hope for her relief in drugs like Prialt.

    And, since she has mentioned relief from the chronic pain would help her quit smoking, I am doubly happy this kind of research is progressing. 🙂

  3. OmarTheAlien says:

    We really need to get hot on these things ’cause I’m getting close to the danger zone on Parkinson’s, Alzeimer’s and all the rest of that old age crap.

  4. James Hill says:

    There’s a lot of great research going on at “The U” around cancer as well, including work on the recently introduced HPV vaccine.

  5. ken ehrman says:

    do you think that finally snail oil will be able to replace snake oil?


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