Sunday, December 7, 2008

MIRACLE FOR ANTIPEPTIDES FROM MILLIPEDES



Millipedes are small invertebrates that mostly feed on dead or decaying plant material. They have a tough and firm exoskeleton but have virtually no other defense against larger aggressive carnivores. As a result, many millipedes have adapted sophisticated chemical defenses and are able to produce chemicals such as quinones, cresols, phenols and hydrogen cyanide. In flat-backed millipedes cyanide is produced in double-chambered segmented glands that initially produce a cyanophore (a harmless organic cyanide compound) in one chamber. When needed the cyanophore is secreted into the other chamber which produces an enzyme that breaks the cyanophore into hydrogen cyanide, which escapes through a pore and can kill an attacking insect or sicken a toad or frog. Millipedes survive their own toxins by closing off their breathing pores until the danger passes. If a human handles the millipedes the release of the odourless cyanide can be detected as a result of the simultaneous release of a benzaldehyde, which has a strong smell of crushed almonds.A European species of millipede, Glomeris marginata produces a powerful sedative belonging to a chemical group called quinazolinones (includes the commercial sedative Quaalude). As a result, attacking wolf spiders simply go to sleep, sometimes for days. An additional component released with it contains powerful anti-feedant chemicals, which initially stop the spider from biting and feeding until the sedative takes effect. To let would-be predators know they are lethal the millipedes exhibit aposematic colouration (bright colours, such as reds and yellows to advertise their toxicity or distastefulness).

No comments: