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Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures

Ricin, a plant-derived toxin originating from the seeds of Ricinus communis (castor bean plant), is one of the most lethal toxins known. To date, there is no approved post-exposure therapy for ricin exposures. This work demonstrates for the first time the therapeutic efficacy of equine-derived anti-...

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Autores principales: Falach, Reut, Sapoznikov, Anita, Evgy, Yentl, Aftalion, Moshe, Makovitzki, Arik, Agami, Avi, Mimran, Avishai, Lerer, Elad, Ben David, Alon, Zichel, Ran, Katalan, Shahaf, Rosner, Amir, Sabo, Tamar, Kronman, Chanoch, Gal, Yoav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7354453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32481526
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins12060354
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author Falach, Reut
Sapoznikov, Anita
Evgy, Yentl
Aftalion, Moshe
Makovitzki, Arik
Agami, Avi
Mimran, Avishai
Lerer, Elad
Ben David, Alon
Zichel, Ran
Katalan, Shahaf
Rosner, Amir
Sabo, Tamar
Kronman, Chanoch
Gal, Yoav
author_facet Falach, Reut
Sapoznikov, Anita
Evgy, Yentl
Aftalion, Moshe
Makovitzki, Arik
Agami, Avi
Mimran, Avishai
Lerer, Elad
Ben David, Alon
Zichel, Ran
Katalan, Shahaf
Rosner, Amir
Sabo, Tamar
Kronman, Chanoch
Gal, Yoav
author_sort Falach, Reut
collection PubMed
description Ricin, a plant-derived toxin originating from the seeds of Ricinus communis (castor bean plant), is one of the most lethal toxins known. To date, there is no approved post-exposure therapy for ricin exposures. This work demonstrates for the first time the therapeutic efficacy of equine-derived anti-ricin F(ab’)(2) antibodies against lethal pulmonary and systemic ricin exposures in swine. While administration of the antitoxin at 18 h post-exposure protected more than 80% of both intratracheally and intramuscularly ricin-intoxicated swine, treatment at 24 h post-exposure protected 58% of the intramuscular-exposed swine, as opposed to 26% of the intratracheally exposed animals. Quantitation of the anti-ricin neutralizing units in the anti-toxin preparations confirmed that the disparate protection conferred to swine subjected to the two routes of exposure stems from variance between the two models. Furthermore, dose response experiments showed that approximately 3 times lesser amounts of antibody are needed for high-level protection of the intramuscularly compared to the intratracheally intoxicated swine. This study, which demonstrates the high-level post-exposure efficacy of anti-ricin antitoxin at clinically relevant time-points in a large animal model, can serve as the basis for the formulation of post-exposure countermeasures against ricin poisoning in humans.
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spelling pubmed-73544532020-08-05 Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures Falach, Reut Sapoznikov, Anita Evgy, Yentl Aftalion, Moshe Makovitzki, Arik Agami, Avi Mimran, Avishai Lerer, Elad Ben David, Alon Zichel, Ran Katalan, Shahaf Rosner, Amir Sabo, Tamar Kronman, Chanoch Gal, Yoav Toxins (Basel) Article Ricin, a plant-derived toxin originating from the seeds of Ricinus communis (castor bean plant), is one of the most lethal toxins known. To date, there is no approved post-exposure therapy for ricin exposures. This work demonstrates for the first time the therapeutic efficacy of equine-derived anti-ricin F(ab’)(2) antibodies against lethal pulmonary and systemic ricin exposures in swine. While administration of the antitoxin at 18 h post-exposure protected more than 80% of both intratracheally and intramuscularly ricin-intoxicated swine, treatment at 24 h post-exposure protected 58% of the intramuscular-exposed swine, as opposed to 26% of the intratracheally exposed animals. Quantitation of the anti-ricin neutralizing units in the anti-toxin preparations confirmed that the disparate protection conferred to swine subjected to the two routes of exposure stems from variance between the two models. Furthermore, dose response experiments showed that approximately 3 times lesser amounts of antibody are needed for high-level protection of the intramuscularly compared to the intratracheally intoxicated swine. This study, which demonstrates the high-level post-exposure efficacy of anti-ricin antitoxin at clinically relevant time-points in a large animal model, can serve as the basis for the formulation of post-exposure countermeasures against ricin poisoning in humans. MDPI 2020-05-28 /pmc/articles/PMC7354453/ /pubmed/32481526 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins12060354 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Falach, Reut
Sapoznikov, Anita
Evgy, Yentl
Aftalion, Moshe
Makovitzki, Arik
Agami, Avi
Mimran, Avishai
Lerer, Elad
Ben David, Alon
Zichel, Ran
Katalan, Shahaf
Rosner, Amir
Sabo, Tamar
Kronman, Chanoch
Gal, Yoav
Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures
title Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures
title_full Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures
title_fullStr Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures
title_full_unstemmed Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures
title_short Post-Exposure Anti-Ricin Treatment Protects Swine against Lethal Systemic and Pulmonary Exposures
title_sort post-exposure anti-ricin treatment protects swine against lethal systemic and pulmonary exposures
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7354453/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32481526
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins12060354
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