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What makes a giant jellyfish鈥檚 sting deadly

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Deadly proteins from the tentacles of Nomura's jellyfish were identified.
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Journal of Proteome Research

With summer on the way, and some beaches reopening after COVID-19 shutdowns, people will be taking to the ocean to cool off on a hot day. But those unlucky enough to encounter the giant jellyfish聽Nemopilema nomurai聽(also known as Nomura鈥檚 jellyfish) might wish they had stayed on shore. Now, researchers reporting in ACS鈥櫬�Journal of Proteome Research聽have identified the key toxins that make the creature鈥檚 venom deadly to some swimmers.

Found in coastal waters of China, Korea and Japan, Nomura鈥檚 jellyfish can grow up to 6.6 feet in diameter and weigh up to 440 pounds. This behemoth stings hundreds of thousands of people per year, causing severe pain, redness, swelling, and in some cases, even shock or death. The jellyfish鈥檚 venom is a complex brew of numerous toxins, some of which resemble poisons found in other organisms, such as snakes, spiders, bees and bacteria. Rongfeng Li, Pengcheng Li and colleagues wanted to determine which of the many toxins in the jellyfish鈥檚 venom actually cause death. The answer could help scientists develop drugs to counteract jellyfish stings.

The researchers captured聽N. nomurai聽jellyfish off the coast of Dalian, China, and collected their tentacles, which contain the venom. They extracted venom proteins and separated them into different fractions using chromatography. By injecting each protein fraction into mice, the team identified one that killed the animals. Autopsies revealed damage to the mice鈥檚 heart, lungs, liver and kidneys. The researchers used mass spectrometry to identify 13 toxin-like proteins in this lethal fraction. Some of the jellyfish proteins were similar to harmful enzymes and proteins found in poisonous snakes, spiders and bees. Instead of any one toxin being lethal, it鈥檚 likely that multiple poisons work in concert to cause death, the researchers say.

The authors acknowledge funding from the聽, Shandong Province Natural Science Foundation of China and National Key R&D Plan of China.

Registered journalists can subscribe to the to access embargoed and public science press releases. For media inquiries, contact newsroom@acs.org.

Note: ACS does not conduct research but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.

Note: ACS does not conduct research but publishes and publicizes peer-reviewed scientific studies.

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