
pmid: 19303056
The recent bloom of a giant jellyfish Nemopilema nomurai has caused a danger to sea bathers and fishery damages in the waters of China, Korea, and Japan. The present study investigated the cytotoxic and hemolytic activities of crude venom extract of N. nomurai using a number of in vitro assays. The jellyfish venom showed a much higher cytotoxic activity in H9C2 heart myoblast than in C2C12 skeletal myoblast (LC(50)=2 microg/mL vs. 12 microg/mL, respectively), suggesting its possible in vivo selective toxicity on cardiac tissue. This result is consistent with our previous finding that cardiovascular function is a target of the venom. In order to determine the stability of N. nomurai venom, its cytotoxicity was examined under the various temperature and pH conditions. The activity was relatively well retained at low environmental temperature (or=60 degrees C). In pH stability test, the venom has abruptly lost its activity at low pH environment (pH
Jellyfish, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Scyphozoa, Cytotoxins, Cytotoxicity, 610, Heart myoblast, Venom, Hemolysis, 630, Rats, Myoblasts, Cnidarian Venoms, Dogs, Nemopilema nomurai, Cats, Animals, Humans, Rabbits, Cells, Cultured
Jellyfish, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Scyphozoa, Cytotoxins, Cytotoxicity, 610, Heart myoblast, Venom, Hemolysis, 630, Rats, Myoblasts, Cnidarian Venoms, Dogs, Nemopilema nomurai, Cats, Animals, Humans, Rabbits, Cells, Cultured
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