1 00:00:01,840 --> 00:00:07,840 Speaker 1: Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio, Hey Brainstuff. Lorn 2 00:00:07,880 --> 00:00:12,600 Speaker 1: Bogelbaum here. Cone snails are a group of around a 3 00:00:12,680 --> 00:00:16,880 Speaker 1: thousand species of venomous, predatory marine snails that live in 4 00:00:16,960 --> 00:00:21,320 Speaker 1: shallow tropical waters around the globe. Their pretty, cone shaped 5 00:00:21,320 --> 00:00:25,919 Speaker 1: shells are intricately patterned and brightly colored, apprized by seashell collectors, 6 00:00:26,239 --> 00:00:29,680 Speaker 1: and their venom is fascinating to biomedical researchers and science 7 00:00:29,680 --> 00:00:34,040 Speaker 1: fiction writers alike, a pretty high profile for a very slow, 8 00:00:34,320 --> 00:00:39,000 Speaker 1: not particularly aggressive animal that spends its days toddling after worms, fish, 9 00:00:39,159 --> 00:00:43,840 Speaker 1: and other snails for dinner. For example, In the real world, 10 00:00:43,960 --> 00:00:47,240 Speaker 1: their venom has been used in therapies from diabetes treatment 11 00:00:47,320 --> 00:00:51,080 Speaker 1: to terminal pain management. And this is a little bit 12 00:00:51,080 --> 00:00:53,600 Speaker 1: of a deep cut, but take the Jurassic Park film 13 00:00:53,640 --> 00:00:56,680 Speaker 1: sequel of the Lost World. In the movie, an air 14 00:00:56,720 --> 00:01:00,160 Speaker 1: gun with venom darts is used to take down Peschi dinos. 15 00:01:00,640 --> 00:01:03,960 Speaker 1: The active ingredient is purported to be an enhanced venom 16 00:01:04,080 --> 00:01:07,880 Speaker 1: from the cone snail species Conus propuis, ends, of which 17 00:01:07,920 --> 00:01:12,200 Speaker 1: the movie says is the most powerful neurotoxin in the world. 18 00:01:12,920 --> 00:01:15,360 Speaker 1: Before the article, this episode is based on how stuff 19 00:01:15,360 --> 00:01:18,960 Speaker 1: work spoke with Helena Safavi, an assistant professor of biochemistry 20 00:01:19,040 --> 00:01:22,319 Speaker 1: at the University of Utah who studies conesnails and their venom. 21 00:01:23,120 --> 00:01:26,039 Speaker 1: She said, in the movie, the venom is described as 22 00:01:26,040 --> 00:01:28,759 Speaker 1: the most powerful neurotoxin in the world that acts within 23 00:01:28,800 --> 00:01:31,959 Speaker 1: one two thousandth of a second, faster than the velocity 24 00:01:31,959 --> 00:01:35,440 Speaker 1: of nerve conduction. None of this is true, but nevertheless 25 00:01:35,560 --> 00:01:42,120 Speaker 1: very entertaining. Conesnails are very slow animals that cannot graze 26 00:01:42,160 --> 00:01:45,720 Speaker 1: on algae like their non venomous snail relatives, but also 27 00:01:45,840 --> 00:01:49,200 Speaker 1: have no means of mechanical prey capture. That is to say, 28 00:01:49,280 --> 00:01:52,920 Speaker 1: they can't bite or grasp like a shark or cat. 29 00:01:53,520 --> 00:01:56,120 Speaker 1: And despite the lack of teeth and claws, all cone 30 00:01:56,120 --> 00:02:00,720 Speaker 1: snails are impressive predators. Safavi said a when a slow 31 00:02:00,760 --> 00:02:03,440 Speaker 1: animal wants to hunt other creatures, it has to evolve 32 00:02:03,560 --> 00:02:07,560 Speaker 1: potent venom to be successful. Particularly those cone snails that 33 00:02:07,600 --> 00:02:10,400 Speaker 1: prey on fish have to have toxins that can potently 34 00:02:10,440 --> 00:02:15,680 Speaker 1: immobilize the fish prey before it swims away. One of 35 00:02:15,680 --> 00:02:18,720 Speaker 1: the most remarkable things about the thousand ish species of 36 00:02:18,720 --> 00:02:21,800 Speaker 1: cone snail is that there's almost no overlap in the 37 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:25,959 Speaker 1: toxins that are made by each A Safavi said, this 38 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:30,280 Speaker 1: shows how fast these toxins evolve. Even very closely related 39 00:02:30,280 --> 00:02:33,920 Speaker 1: species have only around five to ten percent overlap, with 40 00:02:34,040 --> 00:02:37,840 Speaker 1: each species making several hundreds of toxins. One can estimate 41 00:02:37,880 --> 00:02:40,840 Speaker 1: that there are around half a million different toxins present 42 00:02:40,880 --> 00:02:46,920 Speaker 1: in cone snails. Because their venoms are unique to specific species, 43 00:02:47,120 --> 00:02:50,600 Speaker 1: some species deliver a very minor sting and others could 44 00:02:50,680 --> 00:02:54,919 Speaker 1: kill you. A Safavi explained there are about forty known 45 00:02:54,919 --> 00:02:58,560 Speaker 1: fatalities by con snails, and nearly all, if not all, 46 00:02:58,800 --> 00:03:02,760 Speaker 1: were caused by a single species. Conus geographis commonly known 47 00:03:02,800 --> 00:03:06,040 Speaker 1: as the geography cone. Some of the toxins in this 48 00:03:06,120 --> 00:03:10,120 Speaker 1: species can cause acute respiratory failure and potentially heart failure. 49 00:03:10,760 --> 00:03:12,960 Speaker 1: It's also one of the species that can inject larger 50 00:03:13,040 --> 00:03:16,880 Speaker 1: quantities of venom compared to most other cone snails. Compared 51 00:03:16,919 --> 00:03:20,440 Speaker 1: to snakes and even scorpions and spiders, death from cone 52 00:03:20,480 --> 00:03:26,040 Speaker 1: snail stings are extremely rare. Cone snails might not have fangs, 53 00:03:26,280 --> 00:03:29,560 Speaker 1: but most have a venom covered harpoon that they use 54 00:03:29,639 --> 00:03:34,360 Speaker 1: to incapacitate their prey. Okay mollusks, like snails, often have 55 00:03:34,520 --> 00:03:38,520 Speaker 1: a radula a type of combination tooth and tongue structure. 56 00:03:39,320 --> 00:03:42,440 Speaker 1: It's often a ribbon like structure with many tiny teeth, 57 00:03:42,840 --> 00:03:46,200 Speaker 1: and it helps them scrape up or cut down food. 58 00:03:46,960 --> 00:03:49,160 Speaker 1: In the case of cone snails, the radula has a 59 00:03:49,240 --> 00:03:51,840 Speaker 1: venom sack at its base and it's barbed at the 60 00:03:51,840 --> 00:03:54,760 Speaker 1: other end it can dart out. It's some four hundred 61 00:03:54,800 --> 00:03:57,280 Speaker 1: miles an hour. That's about six hundred and fifty kilometers 62 00:03:57,280 --> 00:04:02,680 Speaker 1: an hour instantly incapacitating passing prey, so it doesn't really 63 00:04:02,720 --> 00:04:05,800 Speaker 1: matter that conesnails are slow pokes. All the snail has 64 00:04:05,840 --> 00:04:10,320 Speaker 1: to do is reel its prey into its mouth. Other 65 00:04:10,360 --> 00:04:14,000 Speaker 1: cone snails, like the aforementioned geography cone creep up on 66 00:04:14,120 --> 00:04:17,400 Speaker 1: sleeping fish and shoot out a cloud of chemicals, one 67 00:04:17,440 --> 00:04:20,320 Speaker 1: of which is insulin that numbs their prey and sends 68 00:04:20,320 --> 00:04:23,799 Speaker 1: them into a sort of hypoglycemic coma before swallowing them whole. 69 00:04:25,320 --> 00:04:27,960 Speaker 1: Yet other cone snails will strike a fish but won't 70 00:04:27,960 --> 00:04:30,880 Speaker 1: tether it with their harpoon. The fish will swum away, 71 00:04:31,240 --> 00:04:33,520 Speaker 1: but will fall under the influence of the snail's venom 72 00:04:33,720 --> 00:04:36,559 Speaker 1: pretty quickly. All the snail has to do is follow 73 00:04:36,600 --> 00:04:40,919 Speaker 1: its prey and gobble it up. These are just a 74 00:04:40,960 --> 00:04:44,120 Speaker 1: few con snail strategies, but with so much diversity in 75 00:04:44,120 --> 00:04:48,120 Speaker 1: conesnail venom, we have a lot to learn, Safavi said. 76 00:04:48,520 --> 00:04:51,560 Speaker 1: We know very little about the various ways that conesnails 77 00:04:51,640 --> 00:04:54,200 Speaker 1: use their venom in the wild. A colleague of mine 78 00:04:54,240 --> 00:04:57,560 Speaker 1: recently showed that some con snails use toxins that mimic 79 00:04:57,640 --> 00:05:01,520 Speaker 1: mating pheromones to lure worms out of their It's really 80 00:05:01,560 --> 00:05:09,520 Speaker 1: fascinating what these animals are capable of. Today's episode is 81 00:05:09,560 --> 00:05:12,040 Speaker 1: based on the article the con snail is a slow 82 00:05:12,080 --> 00:05:15,159 Speaker 1: but highly venomous predator on how stuffworks dot Com, written 83 00:05:15,160 --> 00:05:18,880 Speaker 1: by Jesslynshields. Brain Stuff is production of iHeartRadio in partnership 84 00:05:18,880 --> 00:05:21,360 Speaker 1: with HowStuffWorks dot Com and as produced by Tyler Klang. 85 00:05:21,880 --> 00:05:24,920 Speaker 1: Four more podcasts from my heart Radio. Visit the iHeartRadio app, 86 00:05:25,040 --> 00:05:27,720 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.