Human Saliva Has Potential to Evolve Into Venom

 Snakes hang from a wooden cabinet marked with the Chinese
characters "poisonous snake", at a snake soup shop ahead of the Spring
Festival in Hong Kong. Photo: Reuters
Snakes hang from a wooden cabinet marked with the Chinese characters "poisonous snake", at a snake soup shop ahead of the Spring Festival in Hong Kong. Photo: Reuters
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Human Saliva Has Potential to Evolve Into Venom

 Snakes hang from a wooden cabinet marked with the Chinese
characters "poisonous snake", at a snake soup shop ahead of the Spring
Festival in Hong Kong. Photo: Reuters
Snakes hang from a wooden cabinet marked with the Chinese characters "poisonous snake", at a snake soup shop ahead of the Spring Festival in Hong Kong. Photo: Reuters

Humans have the potential to become venomous due the genetic similarities between our saliva glands and a snake's venom glands, say scientists.

A joint research team from Japan's Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University (OIST) and the Australian National University, found that the genetic foundation required for oral venom to evolve is present in both reptiles and mammals.

Reporting this in the journal PNAS on April 6, the researchers provided the first concrete evidence of an underlying molecular link between venom glands in snakes and salivary glands in mammals.

Venoms are a cocktail of proteins that animals have weaponized to immobilize and kill prey, as well as for self-defense. What's interesting about venom is that it has arisen in so many different animals: jellyfish, spiders, scorpions, snakes, and even some mammals. Although these animals evolved different ways to deliver venom, an oral system, where venom is injected through a bite is one of the most common.

In the study, the team looked at the genes that played important roles in protecting the cells from stress caused by producing lots of proteins. The genes were also key in regulating protein modification and folding. The scientists used venom glands collected from the Taiwan habu snake, a pit viper found in Asia.

The researchers identified around 3,000 of these 'cooperating' genes. Then, they studied the genomes of other creatures across the animal kingdom, including mammals like dogs, chimpanzees and humans, and found that they contained their own versions of these genes.

When the team looked at the salivary gland tissues within mammals, they found that the genes had a similar pattern of activity to that seen in snake venom glands. The scientists therefore think that salivary glands in mammals and venom glands in snakes share an ancient functional core that has been maintained since the two lineages split hundreds of millions of years ago.



New Observations Show Asteroid Resembling a Spinning Hockey Puck

This composite image of asteroid 2024 YR4 was captured with the Gemini South telescope in Chile. (International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani via AP)
This composite image of asteroid 2024 YR4 was captured with the Gemini South telescope in Chile. (International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani via AP)
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New Observations Show Asteroid Resembling a Spinning Hockey Puck

This composite image of asteroid 2024 YR4 was captured with the Gemini South telescope in Chile. (International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani via AP)
This composite image of asteroid 2024 YR4 was captured with the Gemini South telescope in Chile. (International Gemini Observatory/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/M. Zamani via AP)

The asteroid that once had a small chance of striking Earth and now might slam into the moon resembles a spinning hockey puck, scientists said Tuesday.
A team of astronomers used the Gemini South Observatory in Chile to observe asteroid 2024 YR4 in multiple wavelengths as it zoomed away from Earth in February, barely 1 1/2 months after its discovery. They created a 3D image of it based on their findings, The Associated Press reported.
The nearly 200 foot (60-meter) asteroid looks more like a flat disk — or not-quite-round hockey puck — than a potato. It also has a rapid rotation rate of about once every 20 minutes.
“This find was rather unexpected since most asteroids are thought to be shaped like potatoes or toy tops rather than flat disks,” the research team lead, Bryce Bolin from Eureka Scientific said in a statement.
Scientists said it most likely originated in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and is rich in silicates.
At one point earlier this year, NASA and the European Space Agency put the odds of the asteroid striking Earth in 2032 at 3%. It's now down to virtually zero for the next century, but there's a 3.8% chance it could strike the moon instead. Even if that happens, NASA assures the moon's orbit will not be altered.
The asteroid —- which swings our way every four years — will be too far away by next week for ground telescopes to see. The Webb Space Telescope will take another look later this month or next.
Scientists consider all this good practice for when a potentially killer asteroid heads our way.