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Comparative venomics and preclinical efficacy evaluation of a monospecific Hemachatus antivenom towards sub-Saharan Africa cobra venoms

Authors :
Daniel Chavarría
Álvaro Segura
Andrés Sánchez
Juan J. Calvete
Mariángela Vargas
José María Gutiérrez
Davinia Pla
Guillermo León
María Herrera
José M. Munuera
Mauren Villalta
Sarai Quesada-Bernat
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Universidad de Costa Rica
Calvete, Juan J. [0000-0001-5026-3122]
Calvete, Juan J.
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

11 páginas, 3 figuras, 3 tablas<br />Cobras are the most medically important elapid snakes in Africa. The African genera Naja and Hemachatus include snakes with neurotoxic and cytotoxic venoms, with shared biochemical, toxinological and antigenic characteristics. We have studied the antigenic cross-reactivity of four sub-Saharan Africa cobra venoms against an experimental monospecific Hemachatus haemachatus antivenom through comparative proteomics, preclinical assessment of neutralization, and third generation antivenomics. The venoms of H. haemachatus, N. annulifera, N. mossambica and N. nigricollis share an overall qualitative family toxin composition but depart in their proportions of three-finger toxin (3FTxs) classes, phospholipases A2 (PLA2s), snake venom metalloproteinases (SVMPs), and cysteine-rich secretory proteins (CRISPs). A monospecific anti-Hemachatus antivenom produced by Costa Rican Instituto Clodomiro Picado neutralized the lethal activity of the homologous and heterologous neuro/cytotoxic (H. haemachatus) and cyto/cardiotoxic (N. mossambica and N. nigricollis) venoms of the three spitting cobras sampled, while it was ineffective against the lethal and toxic activities of the neurotoxic venom of the non-spitting snouted cobra N. annulifera. The ability of the anti-Hemachatus-ICP antivenom to neutralize toxic (dermonecrotic and anticoagulant) and enzymatic (PLA2) activities of spitting cobra venoms suggested a closer kinship of H. haemachatus and Naja subgenus Afrocobra spitting cobras than to Naja subgenus Uraeus neurotoxic taxa. These results were confirmed by third generation antivenomics. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE: African Naja species represent the most widespread medically important elapid snakes across Africa. To gain deeper insight into the spectrum of medically relevant toxins, we compared the proteome of three spitting cobras (Hemachatus haemachatus, Naja mossambica and N. nigricollis) and one non-spitting cobra (N. annulifera). Three finger toxins and phospholipases A2 are the two major protein families among the venoms analyzed. The development of antivenoms of broad species coverage is an urgent need in sub-Saharan Africa. An equine antivenom raised against H. haemachatus venom showed cross-reactivity with the venoms of H. haemachatus, N. mossambica and N. nigricollis, while having poor recognition of the venom of N. annulifera. This immunological information provides clues for the design of optimum venom mixtures for the preparation of broad spectrum antivenoms.<br />This study was partly supported by grant BFU2017-89103-P from the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovaci ́on, Madrid (Spain), Project 741-B7-108 from the Vicerrectoría de Investigaci ́on of Universidad de Costa Rica, and Beca del Mill ́on, SEP-484-2019, from the Sistema de Estudios de Posgrado, Universidad de Costa Rica. The collaboration of our col- leagues at Instituto Clodomiro Picado and Laboratorio de Ven ́omica Evolutiva y Traslacional, Instituto de Biomedicina de Valencia, CSIC, is gratefully acknowledged. This work was carried out in partial fulfill- ment of the requirements for the M.Sc. degree for A. S ́anchez at the University of Costa Rica

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0575bd5cfe569f4a3732807c0aeb6470