Venom from the giant red bull ant is helping IMB scientists understand the evolution of animal toxins in work that could lead to better treatments for pain.
Researchers from UQ’s Institute for Molecular Bioscience and Centre for Advanced Imaging (CAI) have completed the first comprehensive study of ant venom, revealing toxins that stimulate the human nervous system to cause pain.
Dr Eivind Undheim from CAI said the venom of bees and wasps had been a subject of research for some decades, but there had been little research on ant venom.
“Ants are found on every inhabited continent on Earth, and many of us are familiar with the sting their venom can produce,” he said.
“But, despite the ubiquity of ants, analysing their venom has been neglected by researchers, likely due to ants’ relatively small size and venom yield, and also to the widespread misconception that they produce a simple acidic venom.
Ant venom more than just acid
“Our study revealed that the venom of the giant red bull ant is composed of a suite of peptide toxins, and that these are closely related to those found in the venoms of bees and wasps.
“This discovery suggests these toxins evolved from a common ancestor gene found across the Aculeata, or "stinging wasps" part of the Hymenoptera order, which includes ants, bees, wasps and sawflies.”
The giant red bull ants – Myrmecia gulosa – an Australian species with a notoriously painful sting, were collected from a single colony near the Queensland capital, Brisbane.
IMB's Dr Samuel Robinson said revealing the chemistry behind animal stings could improve understanding of pain physiology and contribute to the development of new pain treatments.
“Venoms are complex mixtures of molecules that animals use to subjugate prey and defend themselves against predators,” he said.
“Defensive stings in particular are usually intensely painful, and contain toxins that directly target our pain-sensing neurons.
“That means we can use animal venoms to study the human nervous system and learn more about how pain travels through the body and how to develop compounds that block it.”
The study, published in Science Advances, was supported by the Australian Research Council and National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.