Meiacanthus grammistes explained

Meiacanthus grammistes, the striped blenny, also called the striped fang blenny, grammistes blenny, line-spot harptail blenny or striped poison-fang blenny, is a species of combtooth blenny from the western Pacific Ocean. The fish stays in the open ocean, but travels into shallow saltwater and brackish estuaries. This venomous species occasionally makes its way into the aquarium trade.

Anatomy

The fish is stout and deep-bodied, with a pointed snout and long continuous dorsal fin. It is brown with tan wavy bands stretching the length of its body. On the dorsal fin near the head is a small blue spot. This species grows to 11cm (04inches) TL. The fish has relatively large fangs (canine teeth) that protrude from the lower jaw.[1]

Venom

The unusual venom, which targets the body's opioid receptors, is being investigated as a potential new painkiller for human use.[2] The venom consists of a neuropeptide also seen in cone snail venom, a lipase similar to the one used by certain species of scorpions and an opioid peptide. Blennies use it to stun predators. The venom reduces the blood pressure of the predator, relaxing its jaws so the blenny can escape. Administration of the venom was found to not cause pain in mice, which is atypical, as most fish venoms are painful. Administration of the venom also did not result in a drop in heart rate in rats.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Fanged blenny 'heroin'-like venom could be the next super-painkiller. Micu. Alexandru. 2017-04-03. ZME Science. 2017-04-04. en-US.
  2. News: Meet the fang blenny: the 'heroin'-injecting fish offering high hopes for new painkillers . 31 March 2017 . Bridie Smith . The Sydney Morning Herald .
  3. 10.1016/j.cub.2017.02.067 . 28366739. The Evolution of Fangs, Venom, and Mimicry Systems in Blenny Fishes. Casewell . N. . J. . Visser . Baumann . K. . Current Biology . 27. 8. 1184–1191. 2017. free . 2017CBio...27.1184C . 1887/115463 . free .