AUTHOR=Lin Zhenjian , Torres Joshua P. , Watkins Maren , Paguigan Noemi , Niu Changshan , Imperial Julita S. , Tun Jortan , Safavi-Hemami Helena , Finol-Urdaneta Rocio K. , Neves Jorge L. B. , Espino Samuel , Karthikeyan Manju , Olivera Baldomero M. , Schmidt Eric W. TITLE=Non-Peptidic Small Molecule Components from Cone Snail Venoms JOURNAL=Frontiers in Pharmacology VOLUME=12 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pharmacology/articles/10.3389/fphar.2021.655981 DOI=10.3389/fphar.2021.655981 ISSN=1663-9812 ABSTRACT=
Venomous molluscs (Superfamily Conoidea) comprise a substantial fraction of tropical marine biodiversity (>15,000 species). Prior characterization of cone snail venoms established that bioactive venom components used to capture prey, defend against predators and for competitive interactions were relatively small, structured peptides (10–35 amino acids), most with multiple disulfide crosslinks. These venom components (“conotoxins, conopeptides”) have been widely studied in many laboratories, leading to pharmaceutical agents and probes. In this review, we describe how it has recently become clear that to varying degrees, cone snail venoms also contain bioactive non-peptidic small molecule components. Since the initial discovery of genuanine as the first bioactive venom small molecule with an unprecedented structure, a broad set of cone snail venoms have been examined for non-peptidic bioactive components. In particular, a basal clade of cone snails (