Cargando…

A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia

Snakebite envenomation is a serious medical problem in many tropical developing countries and was considered by WHO as a neglected tropical disease. Antivenom (AV), the rational and most effective treatment modality, is either unaffordable and/or unavailable in many affected countries. Moreover, eac...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ratanabanangkoon, Kavi, Tan, Kae Yi, Eursakun, Sukanya, Tan, Choo Hock, Simsiriwong, Pavinee, Pamornsakda, Teeraporn, Wiriyarat, Witthawat, Klinpayom, Chaiya, Tan, Nget Hong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4825939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27058956
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004565
_version_ 1782426271084445696
author Ratanabanangkoon, Kavi
Tan, Kae Yi
Eursakun, Sukanya
Tan, Choo Hock
Simsiriwong, Pavinee
Pamornsakda, Teeraporn
Wiriyarat, Witthawat
Klinpayom, Chaiya
Tan, Nget Hong
author_facet Ratanabanangkoon, Kavi
Tan, Kae Yi
Eursakun, Sukanya
Tan, Choo Hock
Simsiriwong, Pavinee
Pamornsakda, Teeraporn
Wiriyarat, Witthawat
Klinpayom, Chaiya
Tan, Nget Hong
author_sort Ratanabanangkoon, Kavi
collection PubMed
description Snakebite envenomation is a serious medical problem in many tropical developing countries and was considered by WHO as a neglected tropical disease. Antivenom (AV), the rational and most effective treatment modality, is either unaffordable and/or unavailable in many affected countries. Moreover, each AV is specific to only one (monospecific) or a few (polyspecific) snake venoms. This demands that each country to prepare AV against its local snake venoms, which is often not feasible. Preparation of a ‘pan-specific’ AV against many snakes over a wide geographical area in some countries/regions has not been possible. If a ‘pan-specific’ AV effective against a variety of snakes from many countries could be prepared, it could be produced economically in large volume for use in many countries and save many lives. The aim of this study was to produce a pan-specific antiserum effective against major medically important elapids in Asia. The strategy was to use toxin fractions (TFs) of the venoms in place of crude venoms in order to reduce the number of antigens the horses were exposed to. This enabled inclusion of a greater variety of elapid venoms in the immunogen mix, thus exposing the horse immune system to a diverse repertoire of toxin epitopes, and gave rise to antiserum with wide paraspecificity against elapid venoms. Twelve venom samples from six medically important elapid snakes (4 Naja spp. and 2 Bungarus spp.) were collected from 12 regions/countries in Asia. Nine of these 12 venoms were ultra-filtered to remove high molecular weight, non-toxic and highly immunogenic proteins. The remaining 3 venoms were not ultra-filtered due to limited amounts available. The 9 toxin fractions (TFs) together with the 3 crude venoms were emulsified in complete Freund’s adjuvant and used to immunize 3 horses using a low dose, low volume, multisite immunization protocol. The horse antisera were assayed by ELISA and by in vivo lethality neutralization in mice. The findings were: a) The 9 TFs were shown to contain all of the venom toxins but were devoid of high MW proteins. When these TFs, together with the 3 crude venoms, were used as the immunogen, satisfactory ELISA antibody titers against homologous/heterologous venoms were obtained. b) The horse antiserum immunologically reacted with and neutralized the lethal effects of both the homologous and the 16 heterologous Asian/African elapid venoms tested. Thus, the use of TFs in place of crude venoms and the inclusion of a variety of elapid venoms in the immunogen mix resulted in antiserum with wide paraspecificity against elapid venoms from distant geographic areas. The antivenom prepared from this antiserum would be expected to be pan-specific and effective in treating envenomations by most elapids in many Asian countries. Due to economies of scale, the antivenom could be produced inexpensively and save many lives. This simple strategy and procedure could be readily adapted for the production of pan-specific antisera against elapids of other continents.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4825939
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-48259392016-04-22 A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia Ratanabanangkoon, Kavi Tan, Kae Yi Eursakun, Sukanya Tan, Choo Hock Simsiriwong, Pavinee Pamornsakda, Teeraporn Wiriyarat, Witthawat Klinpayom, Chaiya Tan, Nget Hong PLoS Negl Trop Dis Research Article Snakebite envenomation is a serious medical problem in many tropical developing countries and was considered by WHO as a neglected tropical disease. Antivenom (AV), the rational and most effective treatment modality, is either unaffordable and/or unavailable in many affected countries. Moreover, each AV is specific to only one (monospecific) or a few (polyspecific) snake venoms. This demands that each country to prepare AV against its local snake venoms, which is often not feasible. Preparation of a ‘pan-specific’ AV against many snakes over a wide geographical area in some countries/regions has not been possible. If a ‘pan-specific’ AV effective against a variety of snakes from many countries could be prepared, it could be produced economically in large volume for use in many countries and save many lives. The aim of this study was to produce a pan-specific antiserum effective against major medically important elapids in Asia. The strategy was to use toxin fractions (TFs) of the venoms in place of crude venoms in order to reduce the number of antigens the horses were exposed to. This enabled inclusion of a greater variety of elapid venoms in the immunogen mix, thus exposing the horse immune system to a diverse repertoire of toxin epitopes, and gave rise to antiserum with wide paraspecificity against elapid venoms. Twelve venom samples from six medically important elapid snakes (4 Naja spp. and 2 Bungarus spp.) were collected from 12 regions/countries in Asia. Nine of these 12 venoms were ultra-filtered to remove high molecular weight, non-toxic and highly immunogenic proteins. The remaining 3 venoms were not ultra-filtered due to limited amounts available. The 9 toxin fractions (TFs) together with the 3 crude venoms were emulsified in complete Freund’s adjuvant and used to immunize 3 horses using a low dose, low volume, multisite immunization protocol. The horse antisera were assayed by ELISA and by in vivo lethality neutralization in mice. The findings were: a) The 9 TFs were shown to contain all of the venom toxins but were devoid of high MW proteins. When these TFs, together with the 3 crude venoms, were used as the immunogen, satisfactory ELISA antibody titers against homologous/heterologous venoms were obtained. b) The horse antiserum immunologically reacted with and neutralized the lethal effects of both the homologous and the 16 heterologous Asian/African elapid venoms tested. Thus, the use of TFs in place of crude venoms and the inclusion of a variety of elapid venoms in the immunogen mix resulted in antiserum with wide paraspecificity against elapid venoms from distant geographic areas. The antivenom prepared from this antiserum would be expected to be pan-specific and effective in treating envenomations by most elapids in many Asian countries. Due to economies of scale, the antivenom could be produced inexpensively and save many lives. This simple strategy and procedure could be readily adapted for the production of pan-specific antisera against elapids of other continents. Public Library of Science 2016-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4825939/ /pubmed/27058956 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004565 Text en © 2016 Ratanabanangkoon et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ratanabanangkoon, Kavi
Tan, Kae Yi
Eursakun, Sukanya
Tan, Choo Hock
Simsiriwong, Pavinee
Pamornsakda, Teeraporn
Wiriyarat, Witthawat
Klinpayom, Chaiya
Tan, Nget Hong
A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia
title A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia
title_full A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia
title_fullStr A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia
title_full_unstemmed A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia
title_short A Simple and Novel Strategy for the Production of a Pan-specific Antiserum against Elapid Snakes of Asia
title_sort simple and novel strategy for the production of a pan-specific antiserum against elapid snakes of asia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4825939/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27058956
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0004565
work_keys_str_mv AT ratanabanangkoonkavi asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT tankaeyi asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT eursakunsukanya asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT tanchoohock asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT simsiriwongpavinee asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT pamornsakdateeraporn asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT wiriyaratwitthawat asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT klinpayomchaiya asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT tanngethong asimpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT ratanabanangkoonkavi simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT tankaeyi simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT eursakunsukanya simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT tanchoohock simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT simsiriwongpavinee simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT pamornsakdateeraporn simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT wiriyaratwitthawat simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT klinpayomchaiya simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia
AT tanngethong simpleandnovelstrategyfortheproductionofapanspecificantiserumagainstelapidsnakesofasia