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Localization of some enzymes in the main venom glands of viperid snakes

✍ Scribed by Raya Sobol Brown


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1974
Tongue
English
Weight
775 KB
Volume
143
Category
Article
ISSN
0362-2525

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Several secretory and nonsecretory enzymes were localized histochemically in the main venom gland of 13 viperid snakes. All secretory cells show the intracellular oxidative enzymes succinate dehydrogenase and monoamine oxidase. The granular reactions obtained for both enzymes resemble mitochondria in distribution. Distinctive cells with a very high succinate dehydrogenase activity are dispersed among the secretory cells of all species except Atractaspis.

Nonspecific acid phosphatase activity is found in the supranuclear region of the secretory cells in species that do not secrete this enzyme and throughout the cytoplasm in snakes that secrete the enzyme. Nonspecific alkaline phosphatase activity occurs in the secretory cells of those snakes whose venom shows this activity. Leucine amino peptidase (aryl amidase) activity is found in the venom and in the secretory cells of all the species.

In Vipera palaestinae both the venom and the secretory cells of the main venom gland contain nonspecific esterase, L‐amino acid oxidase and phosphodiesterase activities. The localization of phosphodiesterase and L‐amino acid oxidase do not show major differences between glands at different intervals from an initial milking.

Adenosine‐monophosphate phosphatase activity is localized in the supranuclear region of the secretory cells in the glands of Vipera palaestinae and Aspis cerastes. Its activity is found in the venom of Aspis only.


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