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Skywizard
27th October 2013, 17:32
http://i.livescience.com/images/i/000/058/404/i02/eating-scorpion-131024.jpg?1382631719
A southern grasshopper mouse eats the Arizona bark scorpions that it has just killed.

The sting of the Arizona bark scorpion is so fierce that humans say the pain is like being hit by a hammer. But the tiny grasshopper mouse shakes off the sting like it's nothing.

Now, researchers have found for the mouse, the sting really is nothing. Instead of causing pain, the scorpion venom blocks it, a fact that could lead to the development of new pain-blocking drugs for people.

"The venom actually blocks the pain signal that the venom is trying to send" to the mouse, said study researcher Ashlee Rowe of Michigan State University. "We don't want to try to sound too cute or anything, but it is sort of like an evolutionary martial art, where the grasshopper mice are turning the tables. They're using their opponents' strength against them."

Fierce mouse

Southern grasshopper mice (Onychomys torridus) are carnivorous desert-dwellers. Among their favorite meals are the Arizona bark scorpions (Centruroides sculpturatus). The scorpions' sting would kill any other rodent the size of the grasshopper mouse, but the little rodent can absorb many stings in the course of attacking a scorpion. In studying this phenomenon, Rowe noticed not only did the mice survive, but they also seemed unconcerned.

"I was really intrigued by the fact that the mice, if they get stung, they just groom a little bit and then it's over," Rowe told LiveScience.

Clearly, the mice had evolved to handle the pain. To find out how, Rowe and her colleagues analyzed how the toxin acts on the nerve cells called nociceptors that pick up and relay pain to the mouse's brain.

Nerve cells communicate pain to the brain by translating stimuli into electric pulses. To do so, tiny channels in the cell membrane, called ion channels, open and close. One ubiquitous type of ion channel, the sodium/potassium channel, is present in cells throughout the body. This channel makes critical bodily functions, from breathing to muscle contractions, possible.

Typically, scorpion venom acts directly on sodium/potassium channels in nociceptors to create the sensation of pain. A specialized channel known as channel 1.7 is responsible for picking up the pain signal, whereas a channel called channel 1.8 carries it to the brain.

"They just turn [the nerve] on and send that signal to the brain," Rowe said.

Not so in the grasshopper mouse. In these rodents, the scorpion toxin binds to channel 1.8.

Cutting a wire

By binding to this transport channel, the toxin shuts it down, effectively blocking itself, Rowe and her colleagues report Friday (Oct. 25) in the journal Science.

"It's kind of like cutting a wire," Rowe said.

The finding explains why the mice seem to feel almost no pain when stung. Instead of acting as a painful stimulus, the toxin ends up acting like an analgesic.

Rowe thinks the grasshopper mice may be one of several animals that have evolved to withstand the scorpion's sting. She's currently investigating three possible creatures that might also feel no pain — though she prefers to keep the identities of those animals a secret until further testing. (Rowe won't be forcing scorpion showdowns in the name of this research; rather, she'll do genetic testing to look for signs of venom resistance.)

The ultimate goal of this work is to find new ways to ease pain in humans.

"One of the things we think is really important that's come out of this is to highlight the importance of sodium channel 1.8 and its ability to block pain signals," Rowe said. If scientists can figure out precisely how the toxin and the nerve cells interact, they may be able to produce compounds that mimic the venom's action. Such basic research also helps researchers understand how these crucial ion channels work.

"These toxins do all kinds of interesting things to the channels," Rowe said. "They close them, they open them, they manipulate them in ways we can't imagine."

Source: http://www.livescience.com/40684-scorpion-eating-mice-no-sting.html


peace...
skywizard

Vitalux
27th October 2013, 17:48
Isn't is amazing that the world that we live in....always seems to be perfectly balanced.
For every disease, there is a cure, and for every creature that exists, there is another creature which keeps it in check and balance.
It is truly an amazing place we find ourselves awaken in.

I often tell people, Earth is a paradise.

DeDukshyn
27th October 2013, 17:52
I agree Vitalux,
Until we step into the "civilized" Human world ...

And here we have an innocent university researcher doing a bunch of really interesting studies and making findings probably on a pittance living, soon to be fully funded by either big pharma or a "philanthropist" working for big pharma, and in the end a small payout to purchase all the research, (or take by sneaky clauses in funding agreements) will take place.

Then big pharma will create a pain relieving cancer drug from this research and charge (gouge) completely unrealistic exorbitant prices, that only high end insurance companies and the very wealthy can afford, but don't worry for all the less wealthy people, we have cancer societies and "movember" and "Run for the cure!" for those that take donations from the masses to help pay for these types of medicines so that big pharma can still make it's maximal amounts of profits. See that money trail on good hearted donations? Straight profits for drug companies. None of it goes into finding cures - it goes into keeping the sick alive for as long as they can pay for (or have paid), these ludicrously priced drugs.

And this is how western medicine works, my friends. I recently just lost my father to cancer - so I do have an inside view on all this. I also have a friend who works for a university in the medical research department. He says the there are lots of breakthroughs made that may lead to cures for certain diseases, but what happens is that in order for these breakthroughs to be fully developed and studied with proper research, large sums of money are needed, and guess where that money comes from? Usually by "philanthropists" and big pharma grants, etc. The put the money where THEY want -- not where it looks most promising .... And the frustration in my friends voice tells me, the money is not going where it is needed for research but most always to where big pharma sees profits. Sad ... but true. The researchers are seen as cheap pawns.

The system is poisoned from top to bottom.


Sorry SW for using your way cool story to shout out this message, but this truly is how things work. ;)

ViralSpiral
27th October 2013, 18:34
Thanks for your post Skywizard. This phenomenon is not unique to mice. Having a love for nature/wildlife, I have witnessed it occasionally with the meerkats of Southern Africa. They are fearless, as are honey badgers (who dont attempt scorpions, but do kill snakes, even poisonous ones)

Here is a sample video. Turn down the volume to tone down the 'dramatics' ;)

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