“…Currently, the animal venoms (such as snake, marine conus, frog, spider, and scorpion toxins) are considered as one of the main sources for the discovery of these compounds (with high selectivity and therapeutic index; Rajendra, Armugam, & Jeyaseelan, 2004;Altawil, Abdel-Rahman, El-Naggar, El-Khayat, & Abdel-Daim, 2015;Safavi-Hemami, Brogan, & Olivera, 2019). Scorpion venom is a rich source of several biologically active molecules (Abdel-Rahman, Harrison, & Strong, 2015;Harrison, Abdel-Rahman, Strong, Tawfik, & Miller, 2016) with various pharmacological properties including antitumor (Elrayess et al, 2019;Ghosh, Roy, Nandi, & Mukhopadhyay, 2019;Mamelak, 2011), analgesic (Chen & Ji, 2002;Shao et al, 2007), antiepileptic (Wang et al, 2001;Yu, Zhang, Wang, & Liu, 1992), and antimicrobial (El-Bitar et al, 2019;Harrison, Abdel-Rahman, Miller, & Strong, 2014;Harrison et al, 2016) activities. The whole body of Chinese scorpion Buthus martensi Karsch (BmK) or its venom has been found to be effective in treating certain neurological disorders (such as hemiplegia, facial paralysis, apoplexy, cerebral palsy, and epilepsy), nerve soothing, and as pain killers (especially pains induced by rheumatism and meningitis; Liu et al, 2003).…”