Sea snail venom: A potential alternative to Opioid Analgesics
Abstract
The marine environment is a large and complex source for novel medicines. Conopeptides are
present in sea snail venoms that have been detected to block pain by activating a separate
molecular mechanism exploited by opioid painkillers. Researchers created a chemical version
of the peptide by studying the conopeptide of cone snail called Conus magus. The synthetic
form of the hydrophilic conopeptide 5-007-MVIIA used in the Pacific fish-hunting snail toxin,
Conus magus, is ziconotide (also known as SNX-111). Intrathecal ziconotide is indeed a new,
useful, and long-lasting dosage form that can be used for symptomatic relief of extreme
persistent cancerous as well as non-malignant pain. It has been approved as an analgesic by the
FDA (Food and Drug Administration and is currently used in the United States. The
complications usually induced by opioids in pain treatment are likely to be overcome by using
this analgesic agent.