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Morphological Evidence for an Oral Venom System in Caecilian Amphibians

Pedro Luiz Mailho‐Fontana, Marta Maria Antoniazzi, César Alexandre, Daniel C. Pimenta, Juliana Mozer Sciani, Edmund D. Brodie, Carlos Jared

2020iScience24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Amphibians are known for their skin rich in glands containing toxins employed in passive chemical defense against predators, different from, for example, snakes that have active chemical defense, injecting their venom into the prey. Caecilians (Amphibia, Gymnophiona) are snake-shaped animals with fossorial habits, considered one of the least known vertebrate groups. We show here that amphibian caecilians, including species from the basal groups, besides having cutaneous poisonous glands as other amphibians do, possess specific glands at the base of the teeth that produce enzymes commonly found in venoms. Our analysis of the origin of these glands shows that they originate from the same tissue that gives rise to teeth, similar to the venom glands in reptiles. We speculate that caecilians might have independently developed mechanisms of production and injection of toxins early in their evolutionary history.

Topics & Concepts

FossorialVertebrateAmphibianBiologyVenomZoologyPredationEcologyBiochemistryGeneVenomous Animal Envenomation and StudiesAmphibian and Reptile BiologyBiochemical and Structural Characterization