February 21, 2024
22/02/2024
February 21, 2024
LA JOLLA, CA Scripps Research scientists have developed an antibody that can block the effects of lethal toxins in the venoms of a wide variety of snakes found throughout Africa, Asia and Australia.
The antibody, which protected mice from the normally deadly venom of snakes including black mambas and king cobras, is described on February 21, 2024, in Science Translational Medicine. The new research used forms of the toxins produced in the laboratory to screen billions of different human antibodies and identify one that can block the toxins' activity. It represents a large step toward a universal antivenom that would be effective against the venom of all snakes.
This antibody works against one of the major toxins found across numerous snake species that contribute to tens of thousands of deaths every year, says senior author Joseph Jardine, PhD, assistant professor of immunology and microbiology at Scripps Research. This could be incredibly valuable for people in low- and middle-income countries that have the largest burden of deaths and injuries from snakebites.
More than 100,000 people a year, mostly in Asia and Africa, die from snakebite envenoming rendering it more deadly than most neglected tropical diseases. Current antivenoms are produced by immunizing animals with snake venom, and each generally only works against a single snake species. This means that many different antivenoms must be manufactured to treat snake bites in the different regions.
Jardine and his colleagues have previously studied how broadly neutralizing antibodies against the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can work by targeting areas of the virus that cannot mutate. They realized that the challenge of finding a universal antivenom was similar to their quest for an HIV vaccine; just like quickly evolving HIV proteins show small differences between each other, different snake venoms have enough variations that an antibody binding to one generally doesn't bind to others. But like HIV, snake toxins also have conserved regions that cannot mutate, and an antibody targeting those could possibly work against all variants of that toxin.
In the new work, which was largely conducted while Jardine and his colleagues were at the nonprofit scientific research organization IAVI, they isolated and compared venom proteins from a variety of elapids a major group of venomous snakes including mambas, cobras and kraits. They found that a type of protein called three-finger toxins (3FTx), present in all elapid snakes, contained small sections that looked similar across different species. In addition, 3FTx proteins are considered highly toxic and are responsible for whole-body paralysis, making them an ideal therapeutic target.
With the goal of discovering an antibody to block 3FTx, the researchers created an innovative platform that put the genes for 16 different 3FTx into mammalian cells, which then produced the toxins in the lab. The team then turned to a library of more than fifty billion different human antibodies and tested which ones bound to the 3FTx protein from the many-banded krait (also known as the Chinese krait or Taiwanese krait), which had the most similarities with other 3FTx proteins. That narrowed their search down to about 3,800 antibodies. Then, they tested those antibodies to see which also recognized four other 3FTx variants. Among the 30 antibodies identified in that screen, one stood out as having the strongest interactions across all the toxin variants: an antibody called 95Mat5.
We were able to zoom in on the very small percentage of antibodies that were cross-reactive for all these different toxins, says Irene Khalek, a Scripps Research scientist and first author of the new paper. This was only possible because of the platform we developed to screen our antibody library against multiple toxins in parallel.
Jardine, Khalek and their colleagues tested the effect of 95Mat5 on mice injected with toxins from the many-banded krait, Indian spitting cobra, black mamba and king cobra. In all cases, mice who simultaneously received an injection of 95Mat5 were not only protected from death, but also paralysis.
When the researchers studied exactly how 95Mat5 was so effective at blocking the 3FTx variants, they discovered that the antibody mimicked the structure of the human protein that 3FTx usually binds to. Interestingly, the broad-acting HIV antibodies that Jardine has previously studied also work by mimicking a human protein.
It's incredible that for two completely different problems, the human immune system has converged on a very similar solution, says Jardine. It also was exciting to see that we could make an effective antibody entirely synthetically we did not immunize any animals nor did we use any snakes.
While 95Mat5 is effective against the venom of all elapids, it does not block the venom of vipers the second group of venomous snakes. Jardine's group is now pursuing broadly neutralizing antibodies against another elapid toxin, as well as two viper toxins. They suspect that combining 95Mat5 with these other antibodies could provide broad coverage against many or all snake venoms.
We think that a cocktail of these four antibodies could potentially work as a universal antivenom against any medically relevant snake in the world, says Khalek.
In addition to Khalek and Jardine, authors of the study, Synthetic development of a broadly neutralizing antibody against snake venom long-chain -neurotoxins, include Yen Thi Kim Nguyen, Jordan Woehl, Jessica M. Smith, Karen Saye-Francisco, Yoojin Kim, Laetitia Misson Mindrebo, Quoc Tran, Mateusz K dzior, Oliver Limbo, Megan Verma, Robyn L. Stanfield, Dennis R. Burton,
LINK: | https://www.scripps.edu/news-and-events/press-room/2024/20240221-jardi... |
See more stories from scripps |
More from Scripps
19/11/2024
November 19, 2024
Scripps Research scientists make annual Highly Cited Researchers list Featured scientists represent a wide range of fields including chemistry, microbiology, im...
30/10/2024
October 30, 2024
Calibr-Skaggs announces initial dosing of a first-in-class regenerative lung medicine in a phase 1 trial for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis CMR316 is a once-week...
24/10/2024
October 23, 2024
Human mini-brains reveal autism biology and potential treatments By creating personalized brain organoids in the lab, Scripps Research scientists showed how ...
16/10/2024
October 15, 2024
Scripps Research scientists discover chemical probes for previously undruggable cancer target Scientists uncover how small molecules interact with a cancer-re...
02/10/2024
October 01, 2024
Professor Stuart Lipton awarded $5 million to study the chemical biology of air pollution on the human brain The grant from the NIA/NIH will support research in...
01/10/2024
September 30, 2024
Seeing double: Designing drugs that target twin cancer proteins Scripps Research scientists used knowledge about a protein to characterize drugs that selectiv...
27/09/2024
September 25, 2024
Scripps Research scientist Ilia Droujinine receives over $3 million to reveal the body's interorgan networks The awards from the NIDDK and the LLHF will let...
20/09/2024
September 19, 2024
Genetic tracing at the Huanan Seafood market further supports COVID animal origins An international collaboration between Scripps Research, University of Arizon...
12/09/2024
September 11, 2024
Scripps Research scientists expand the genetic alphabet to create new proteins The novel method uses sets of four RNA nucleotides rather than the natural three ...
27/08/2024
August 26, 2024
New way to potentially slow cancer growth Using a combination of two protein-mapping methods, Scripps Research scientists uncover novel proteins that could be t...
22/08/2024
August 21, 2024
Gut molecule slows fat burning during fasting Scripps Research scientists discovered a molecule produced by roundworm intestines that signals the brain to slow ...
14/08/2024
March 11, 2024
Using wrist-worn activity trackers to help patients reduce long COVID symptoms New Scripps Research trial aims to validate the use of wearables in guiding parti...
09/08/2024
August 08, 2024
Scripps Research chemists develop new sustainable reaction for creating unique molecular building blocks The building blocks can be used to create polymers with...
26/07/2024
July 25, 2024
Timing matters: Scripps Research study shows ways to improve health alerts Wearable health sensors are a powerful tool in disease detection and in stemming the ...
17/07/2024
July 16, 2024
New sleep study aims to understand cognitive decline in women Scripps Research launches digital trial to identify sleep-related risk factors for Alzheimer's...
11/07/2024
July 09, 2024
Researchers identify brain region involved in oxycodone relapse Study by Scripps Research scientists suggests future therapies for opioid and alcohol addiction....
11/07/2024
July 10, 2024
Researchers pinpoint brain cells that delay first bite of food A set of neurons identified by Scripps Research scientists influence the start of eating and drin...
09/07/2024
July 08, 2024
Nine new faculty join Scripps Research The newly appointed faculty are making transformative discoveries in areas ranging across drug discovery, neuroscience, c...
04/07/2024
May 21, 2024
Drug-like inhibitor shows promise in preventing flu Scripps Research scientists have developed a potential drug-like molecule that blocks the first stage of typ...
03/07/2024
July 02, 2024
Advancing toward a preventative HIV vaccine Across four preclinical studies, Scripps Research, IAVI, and additional collaborators make headway in stimulating th...
21/06/2024
June 20, 2024
Neuroscientist Xin Jin granted Pew and McKnight awards Jin is named a 2024 Pew Scholar and receives the McKnight Scholar Award, supporting her research in mappi...
04/06/2024
June 03, 2024
Esteemed life sciences attorney Barbara Kosacz joins Scripps Research Board of Directors June 03, 2024 LA JOLLA, CA Scripps Research's vision to translat...
24/05/2024
May 23, 2024
Scripps Research's Skaggs Graduate School awards doctoral degrees to 32nd graduating class Skaggs family also honored at commencement ceremony as first reci...
23/05/2024
May 22, 2024
Scripps Research scientists uncover new molecular drivers of Alzheimer's By recording detailed electrical and protein measurements of individual brain cell...
21/05/2024
May 20, 2024
New method to reveal what drives brain diseases Scripps Research scientists develop CRISPR screen technology to determine disease mechanism from tissues with ac...
20/05/2024
May 17, 2024
Scripps Research chemists develop new method for making gamma chiral centers on simple carboxylic acids C-H activation-based method should speed drug molecule ...
17/05/2024
May 16, 2024
Scripps Research chemist Donna Blackmond elected to the Royal Society of the U.K. Blackmond's wide-ranging work has shaped origin of life theories, our unde...
08/05/2024
May 07, 2024
Professor emeritus John (Jack) Johnson elected to the National Academy of Sciences Johnson's multi-disciplinary research has been instrumental in shaping ou...
03/05/2024
May 02, 2024
TIME100 Health list features Scripps Research Executive Vice President Eric Topol New list honors 100 individuals who most influenced global health in 2024. M...
02/05/2024
May 01, 2024
New technique improves T cell-based immunotherapies for solid tumors Scripps Research scientists help T cells more effectively kill solid tumors cells in vitro ...
20/04/2024
April 19, 2024
New copper-catalyzed C-H activation strategy from Scripps Research Two-mode reactions inspired by human detox enzymes offer powerful new tools for drug discover...
12/04/2024
April 11, 2024
Scripps Research study reveals new approach for combating resting bacteria Blocking long phosphate molecules could eventually help treat chronic infections in...
06/04/2024
April 05, 2024
A simple, inexpensive way to make carbon atoms bind together A Scripps Research team uncovers a cost-effective method for producing quaternary carbon molecules,...
04/04/2024
April 03, 2024
Developing a vaccine for the zombie drug xylazine Scripps Research chemical biologists design an early proof-of-concept vaccine that could lead to the first...
30/03/2024
March 29, 2024
How blocking a neural receptor responsible for addiction could reduce alcohol use A Scripps Research team found that a new therapeutic that targets the kappa op...
13/03/2024
March 13, 2024
New computational strategy boosts the ability of drug designers to target proteins inside the membrane Customized-design approach could streamline the design of...
29/02/2024
February 29, 2024
Scripps Research scientists reveal how first cells could have formed on Earth New phospholipid discovery brings researchers closer to understanding how primordi...
29/02/2024
February 28, 2024
How molecular handedness emerged in early biology Scripps Research chemists fill a major gap in origin-of-life theories. February 28, 2024 LA JOLLA, CA Mole...
22/02/2024
February 21, 2024
Snaking toward a universal antivenom Scripps Research scientists discovered antibodies that protect against a host of lethal snake venoms. February 21, 2024 ...
06/02/2024
February 06, 2024
Calibr-Skaggs announces expansion of option and license agreement with AbbVie to develop novel cell therapies for solid tumors and autoimmune diseases AbbVie...
26/01/2024
January 25, 2024
Re-energizing mitochondria to treat Alzheimer's disease Scripps Research team restored neuron-to-neuron connections in human cells. January 25, 2024 LA JO...
24/01/2024
January 04, 2024
100 years of Science Changing Life: Scripps Research celebrates a century of transforming human health For the last century, institute leaders and renowned scie...
23/01/2024
January 23, 2024
New technology lets researchers track brain cells' off switches The method could shed light on what goes awry in numerous brain conditions when neurons ar...
09/01/2024
January 08, 2024
Three decades of giving: Announcing the Calibr-Skaggs Institute for Innovative Medicines The ALSAM Foundation, founded by the Skaggs family, provides lasting g...
04/01/2024
January 03, 2024
Life science entrepreneur Gene Lay joins Scripps Research Board of Directors Lay, founder of the global biotech company BioLegend, brings invaluable experience ...
21/12/2023
December 20, 2023
Taming a plant-derived toxin Scripps Research team modifies the traditional poison picrotoxinin for potential neurological drugs and anti-parasite treatments. ...
19/12/2023
December 18, 2023
Scripps Research Executive Vice President Eric Topol gives TED talk on transformative power of AI in medicine Topol provides an overview of how AI models can i...
13/12/2023
December 12, 2023
New AI-powered algorithm could better assess people's risk of common heart condition Early detection of atrial fibrillation can reduce the risk of stroke an...
07/12/2023
December 06, 2023
Nanoparticle flu vaccine design shows promise in early tests Scripps Research-designed vaccine could provide broad, enduring protection against influenza A str...
16/11/2023
November 15, 2023
Numerous Scripps Research scientists named Highly Cited Researchers Clarivate's annual, global list represents researchers who have demonstrated significant...