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  Authors

Toxicity in animals. Trends in evolution?

 

  Title

Toxicon 2001 Jan 1;39(1):87-96 1 table, 5 figs.

 

  Source
Animals, poisonous, various, Mechanisms, Genetic toxicology

 

  Index terms
Animals acquire toxicity either by metabolic synthesis of toxins (secondary metabolites), by expression of toxin genes or by the uptake, storage and sequestration of toxins produced by other organisms, i.e., microbes, plants or other animals. Variability of toxin structure and function is high. Peptide toxins in particular, although relying on a limited number of structural frameworks, often exhibit considerable structural hypervariability. An accelerated rate of evolution in the toxin gene structure (conserved introns, but high substitution rates in the exons) leads to the functional diversity of these peptides or proteins. The selective forces which may drive toxin evolution are unknown. Venomousness or the possession of toxins can be essential for survival, but the advantage of toxin biosynthesis may also be of minor importance or has been lost during evolution. FullText: Mebs.Animals.2001.pdf

 

  Abstract
Article

 

  Type
Disclaimer: The producers of these references take care to avoid errors but cannot be hold
responsible for inaccuracies. Also, knowledge is constantly changing and the reader is
advised to search carefully for the most recent and relevant studies.

 

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