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Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes

For over a century, polyclonal antibodies have been used to treat snakebite envenoming and are still considered by the WHO as the only scientifically validated treatment for snakebites. Nevertheless, moderate innovations have been introduced to this immunotherapy. New strategies and approaches to un...

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Autores principales: Corrêa-Netto, Carlos, Strauch, Marcelo A., Monteiro-Machado, Marcos, Teixeira-Araújo, Ricardo, Fonseca, Juliana Guzzo, Leitão-Araújo, Moema, Machado-Alves, Maria Lúcia, Sanz, Libia, Calvete, Juan J., Melo, Paulo A., Zingali, Russolina Benedeta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9863321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36668835
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins15010015
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author Corrêa-Netto, Carlos
Strauch, Marcelo A.
Monteiro-Machado, Marcos
Teixeira-Araújo, Ricardo
Fonseca, Juliana Guzzo
Leitão-Araújo, Moema
Machado-Alves, Maria Lúcia
Sanz, Libia
Calvete, Juan J.
Melo, Paulo A.
Zingali, Russolina Benedeta
author_facet Corrêa-Netto, Carlos
Strauch, Marcelo A.
Monteiro-Machado, Marcos
Teixeira-Araújo, Ricardo
Fonseca, Juliana Guzzo
Leitão-Araújo, Moema
Machado-Alves, Maria Lúcia
Sanz, Libia
Calvete, Juan J.
Melo, Paulo A.
Zingali, Russolina Benedeta
author_sort Corrêa-Netto, Carlos
collection PubMed
description For over a century, polyclonal antibodies have been used to treat snakebite envenoming and are still considered by the WHO as the only scientifically validated treatment for snakebites. Nevertheless, moderate innovations have been introduced to this immunotherapy. New strategies and approaches to understanding how antibodies recognize and neutralize snake toxins represent a challenge for next-generation antivenoms. The neurotoxic activity of Micrurus venom is mainly due to two distinct protein families, three-finger toxins (3FTx) and phospholipases A(2) (PLA(2)). Structural conservation among protein family members may represent an opportunity to generate neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against family-conserved epitopes. In this work, we sought to produce a set of monoclonal antibodies against the most toxic components of M. altirostris venom. To this end, the crude venom was fractionated, and its major toxic proteins were identified and used to generate a panel of five mAbs. The specificity of these mAbs was characterized by ELISA and antivenomics approaches. Two of the generated mAbs recognized PLA(2) epitopes. They inhibited PLA(2) catalytic activity and showed paraspecific neutralization against the myotoxicity from the lethal effect of Micrurus and Naja venoms’ PLA(2s). Epitope conservation among venom PLA(2) molecules suggests the possibility of generating pan-PLA(2) neutralizing antibodies.
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spelling pubmed-98633212023-01-22 Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes Corrêa-Netto, Carlos Strauch, Marcelo A. Monteiro-Machado, Marcos Teixeira-Araújo, Ricardo Fonseca, Juliana Guzzo Leitão-Araújo, Moema Machado-Alves, Maria Lúcia Sanz, Libia Calvete, Juan J. Melo, Paulo A. Zingali, Russolina Benedeta Toxins (Basel) Article For over a century, polyclonal antibodies have been used to treat snakebite envenoming and are still considered by the WHO as the only scientifically validated treatment for snakebites. Nevertheless, moderate innovations have been introduced to this immunotherapy. New strategies and approaches to understanding how antibodies recognize and neutralize snake toxins represent a challenge for next-generation antivenoms. The neurotoxic activity of Micrurus venom is mainly due to two distinct protein families, three-finger toxins (3FTx) and phospholipases A(2) (PLA(2)). Structural conservation among protein family members may represent an opportunity to generate neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against family-conserved epitopes. In this work, we sought to produce a set of monoclonal antibodies against the most toxic components of M. altirostris venom. To this end, the crude venom was fractionated, and its major toxic proteins were identified and used to generate a panel of five mAbs. The specificity of these mAbs was characterized by ELISA and antivenomics approaches. Two of the generated mAbs recognized PLA(2) epitopes. They inhibited PLA(2) catalytic activity and showed paraspecific neutralization against the myotoxicity from the lethal effect of Micrurus and Naja venoms’ PLA(2s). Epitope conservation among venom PLA(2) molecules suggests the possibility of generating pan-PLA(2) neutralizing antibodies. MDPI 2022-12-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9863321/ /pubmed/36668835 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins15010015 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Corrêa-Netto, Carlos
Strauch, Marcelo A.
Monteiro-Machado, Marcos
Teixeira-Araújo, Ricardo
Fonseca, Juliana Guzzo
Leitão-Araújo, Moema
Machado-Alves, Maria Lúcia
Sanz, Libia
Calvete, Juan J.
Melo, Paulo A.
Zingali, Russolina Benedeta
Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes
title Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes
title_full Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes
title_fullStr Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes
title_full_unstemmed Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes
title_short Monoclonal-Based Antivenomics Reveals Conserved Neutralizing Epitopes in Type I PLA(2) Molecules from Coral Snakes
title_sort monoclonal-based antivenomics reveals conserved neutralizing epitopes in type i pla(2) molecules from coral snakes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9863321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36668835
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins15010015
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