Abstract
Accidents involving Micrurus snakes are not the most common ones but are noteworthy due to their severity. Victims envenomed by Micrurus snakes are at high risk of death and therefore must be treated with coral antivenom. In Brazil, the immunization mixture used to fabricate coral antivenom contains Micrurus frontalis and Micrurus corallinus venoms, which are difficult to be obtained in adequate amounts. Different approaches to solve the venom limitation problem have been attempted, including the use of synthetic and recombinant antigens as substitutes. The present work proposes a combined immunization protocol, using priming doses of M. frontalis venom and booster doses of synthetic B-cell epitopes derived from M. corallinus toxins (four three-finger toxins-3FTX; and one phospholipase A2-PLA2) to obtain coral antivenom in a rabbit model. Immunized animals elicited a humoral response against both M. frontalis and M. corallinus venoms, as detected by sera reactivity in ELISA and Western Blot. Relevant cross-reactivity of the obtained sera with other Micrurus species (Micrurus altirostris, Micrurus lemniscatus, Micrurus spixii, Micrurus surinamensis) venoms was also observed. The elicited antibodies were able to neutralize PLA2 activity of both M. frontalis and M. corallinus venoms. In vivo, immunized rabbit sera completely protected mice from a challenge with 1.5 median lethal dose (LD50) of M. corallinus venom and 50% of mice challenged with 1.5 LD50 of M. frontalis venom. These results show that this combined protocol may be a suitable alternative to reduce the amount of venom used in coral antivenom production in Brazil.
Keywords: antivenom, synthetic peptides, Micrurus, snake, epitopes, three-finger toxins, phospholipase A2
Introduction
Snakebite is a worldwide health problem, considered by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a neglected tropical disease (1). Almost 3 million snake envenomings, with 81,000–138,000 deaths, are officially reported per year. However, since most accidents occur in poor rural areas often devoid of medical care and proper data registry, this number is thought to be largely underestimated (2).
In Brazil, four genera are responsible for the medically relevant accidents: Bothrops, Crotalus, Lachesis, and Micrurus (3). Among them, elapid envenomation caused by snakes from the genus Micrurus are not the most common ones, but are noteworthy due to their severity, as more than 26% of the cases are considered to be severe (in bothropic accidents, the most prevalent ones, severe accidents correspond to only 7% of the cases) (4).
In human accidents caused by Micrurus snakes, there is substantial risk of neuromuscular blockage, with paralysis and respiratory failure leading to death. Even patients admitted with mild symptoms or even completely asymptomatic can progress to paralysis in a short time interval (5). Therefore, the treatment protocol recommended by the Brazilian Ministry of Health states that all victims of elapid accidents must receive 10 ampoules of coral antivenom, regardless of the severity of the initial symptoms presented (6).
Brazilian coral antivenom is produced from horse hyperimmunization with venom from the two species responsible for most accidents (7): Micrurus frontalis and Micrurus corallinus; but at least 33 other species are described in the country (8). Venom availability is an important bottleneck for antivenom production, since Micrurus snakes are relatively small, with reduced venom glands and lower venom yields compared to other snakes. While Bothrops snakes give around 80 mg of venom per milking, Micrurus venom yield is considerably lower. The amount of venom that can be extracted from a Micrurus snake can vary greatly depending on the species. It ranges from 3 mg for M. corallinus to 54 mg per milking in M. suranimensis, but venom yield average rarely exceeds 20 mg (7–10). Also, M. corallinus is a species particularly sensitive to captivity, with important dietary restrictions and disease susceptibility. Moreover, the acquisition of new snake specimens by antivenom producers animal husbandry has decreased over time, since it has been more difficult to find them in nature due to their fossorial habits and reduction of their natural habitat (9, 11).
Research efforts have been made to overcome these problems in coral antivenom production. Better animal management (11), strategies to enhance collected venom yields (9) and even a suggestion of using cross-neutralizing antivenom obtained from other species of Elapidae snakes (12) were proposed.
Another approach to address this problem is the use of synthetic substitutes to M. corallinus venom. In 2009, Leão and collaborators indicated some candidate molecules from its venom gland transcriptome analysis to represent M. corallinus venom in antivenom production. The toxin selection was based on abundance and representative variability. Three-finger toxins (3FTX) and phospholipases A2 (PLA2) accounted for more than 85% of the toxins expressed. Thus, cDNAs corresponding to four diverse 3FTXs and one PLA2 were applied in a preliminary immunization protocol. The selected antigens could induce specific antibodies, although venom recognition by the generated antibodies in ELISA was low (13).
Using the same five toxins from M. corallinus venom selected by Leão et al. (13), Castro et al. (14) performed epitope mapping of these antigens by SPOT technique and bioinformatic analysis. The combination of the mapping approaches of these five antigens resulted in the selection of nine sequences corresponding to putative epitopes, which were chemically synthesized. A mixture of these synthetic peptides was used to immunize rabbits. Anti-peptides antibodies were capable of neutralizing phospholipase A2 and lethal activities of M. corallinus venom, validating the potential application of these synthetic molecules in antivenom production. Ramos et al. (15) also used the antigens defined by Leão et al. (13) to map epitopes and proposed a genetic immunization protocol using DNA-strings and a multiepitopic protein. Serum derived from the genetic immunization protected mice challenged with M. corallinus venom.
Considering all previous efforts described above, the present work proposes a combined immunization protocol to produce a bivalent coral antivenom, using crude M. frontalis venom and substituting M. corallinus venom for the synthetic peptides validated by Castro et al. (14).
Materials and Methods
Animals and Venoms
Micrurus sp. venoms were kindly provided by Ezequiel Dias Foundation (FUNED): M. frontalis, M. corallinus, M. lemniscatus, M. altirostris and by Instituto National de Salud (Peru): M. spixii, M. surinamensis. Snakes' subspecies of the obtained venom samples were not specified by the donors. Lyophilized venoms were stored at −20°C in the dark. Prior to use, venoms were dissolved in ultra-pure water and protein content was determined by Lowry method (16), using bovine serum albumin as standard.
Female Swiss mice (18–22 g) and New Zealand female rabbits (2 kg) were maintained in Centro de Bioterismo of Instituto de Ciências Biológicas of Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG), Brazil. All animals received food and water ad libitum under controlled environmental conditions.
This study was carried out in accordance with the principles of the Basel Declaration and recommendations of the Brazilian Council for the Control of Animal Experimentation (CONCEA). The protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee in Animal Experimentation from the Federal University of Minas Gerais (protocol 375/2012-CETEA/UFMG).
Synthesis of Soluble Peptides
Epitope sequences mapped in the work of Castro et al. (14) (39PDDFTCVKKWEGGGRRV55, from 3FTX Mcor0100c, named Pep100; 37TCPAGQKICFKKWKKG52 and 64PKPKKDETIQCCTKNN79, from 3FTX Mcor0039c, named Pep039a and Pep039b, respectively; 22LECKICNFKTCPTDELRH39 and 54THRGLRIDRGCAATCPTVK72 from 3FTX Mcor0604c, named Pep604a and Pep604b; 28RHASDSQTTTCLSGICYKK45 and 58GCPQSSRGVKVDCCMRDK75, from Mcor0599c, named Pep599a and Pep599b, respectively and peptides 28NLINFQRMIQCTTRRSAW45 and 119NCDRTAALCFGRAPYNKNN137, from McorPLA2, named PepPLA2a and Pep- PLA2b) were synthesized by the Fmoc chemistry method on an automatic Multipep robot (Intavis). All internal cysteine residues were replaced by serines and a tyrosine was added to the N-terminus of the sequences which did not possess aromatic residues (Pep039b, Pep604a and b, and Pep599b) in order to allow quantification of peptides by absorbance at 280 nm. During the synthesis, peptides were immobilized on Rink Amide resin (Novabiochem). At the end of the synthesis, peptides were released from the resin, and side chain deprotection was carried out by trifluoroacetic acid treatment (95% TFA, 2.5% triisopropylsilane, and 2.5% water). All peptides were N-terminally acetylated and C-terminally amidated. After synthesis, peptides were lyophilized, and their purity was assessed by mass spectrometry in system MALDI-TOF/TOF (Autoflex III e Bruker Daltonics Inc.). The experimentally measured peptide masses differed from the theoretically expected by 1.012 Da ± 0.658 on average, indicating good synthesis quality.
Immunization Protocols
Adult New Zealand female rabbits were immunized as a proof-of-concept of the proposed immunization protocol for coral antivenom production (Figure 1A). After collection of non-immune sera, animals received an initial subcutaneous injection of 200 μg of M. frontalis crude venom in complete Freund's adjuvant (day 1). Two booster injections were made subcutaneously at intervals of 2 weeks with the same dose (200 μg) of M. frontalis venom in incomplete Freund's adjuvant. Two weeks after that, rabbits received three subcutaneous injections of 450 μg of the mixture of all synthetic peptides (Figure 1B) (50 μg of each peptide) in incomplete Freund's adjuvant, also at intervals of 2 weeks. Blood samples were drawn 1 week after each injection. After a break of 60 days, rabbits received six additional doses of 450 μg of the mixture of all peptides in Montanide adjuvant at intervals of 2 weeks. Blood samples were drawn 1 week after the last injection.
IgG Purification
IgGs were purified from immunized rabbit's sera. Serum IgGs were concentrated by precipitation with ammonium sulfate and purified by affinity chromatography using a Protein A-Sepharose column (GE Healthcare), according to the protocol described by the GE Healthcare Bio-Sciences AB.
Indirect ELISA Assays
Microtitration plates (Costar, USA) were coated overnight with either 0.5 μg/well of Micrurus venoms at 4°C or 1.0 μg/well of glutaraldehyde polymerized peptides at 37°C in carbonate buffer pH 9.6. After blocking (3% skimmed milk in PBS) and washing (0.05% Tween-saline), non-immune rabbit sera or immune sera were added in different dilutions and incubated for 1 h at 37°C. Plates were washed and incubated with anti-rabbit IgG conjugated with peroxidase (Sigma, USA) diluted 1:10,000, for 1 h at 37°C. After washing, OPD Peroxidase substrate (SIGMAFAST from Sigma-Aldrich) was added to the wells. The reaction was interrupted after 30 min using 20 μl of a 1:20 sulfuric acid solution. Absorbance values were determined at 490 nm using an ELISA plate reader (BIO-RAD, iMark models, EUA). Values represent the mean of two independent experiments.
Western Blotting
Micrurus venoms were diluted in sample buffer under reducing conditions and SDS-PAGE was performed on 18% polyacrylamide gels. Protein bands were visualized by silver staining or transferred to nitrocellulose membranes for immunoblotting.
For western blot, gels were wet-transferred to nitrocellulose membranes overnight. The membrane was blocked with PBS-Tween 0.3% for 1 h. After washing three times for 5 min with PBS-Tween 0.05%, the membrane was incubated with either rabbit non-immune serum, immunized rabbit sera or commercial coral antivenom produced by FUNED, diluted 1:2,000 for 1 h. The membrane was washed (PBS-Tween 0.05%) three times and immunoreactive proteins were detected using anti-rabbit or anti-horse IgGs conjugated to peroxidase for 1 h at 37°C. After additional washes, reaction was detected using DAB/chloronaphthol substrate, according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Phospholipase A2 Activity Determination
To analyze PLA2 activity, EnzChek® PLA2 Assay Kit (Life Technologies) was used. The experiment was made following EnzCheck's protocol, using 2 μg of either M. frontalis or M. corallinus venom. A solution of PLA2 10 U/mL in 1 × PLA2 reaction buffer was used as positive control and the same buffer without PLA2 was used as negative control. All assays were performed in duplicates. Means of the results from two independent experiments were calculated and plotted as percentage of activity, relative to the positive control.
Neutralization Assays
Neutralization of Phospholipase Activity
PLA2 activity was determined using an indirect hemolytic assay described by Gutiérrez et al. (17). Samples with increasing concentrations of either M. frontalis or M. corallinus venom were prepared in a final volume of 15 microliters in PBS and added to 3 mm wells in agarose gels (0.8% in phosphate buffered saline, pH 8.1) containing 1.2% rabbit erythrocytes, 1.2% egg yolk as a lecithin source and 100 mM of CaCl2. After incubation at 37°C for 18 h in a wet chamber, hemolytic halos were measured. Then, the minimum phospholipase dose (MPD: the minimum concentration of venom which produced a hemolytic halo of 1 cm of diameter) was determined.
For assessing the PLA2 neutralizing potential of rabbits' IgG's, increasing concentrations of IgGs were pre-incubated with 1 MPD of either M. frontalis or M. corallinus crude venom at 37°C for 1 h and added to the 3 mm wells in agarose. The assay proceeded as described above. As controls, non-immune IgGs were incubated with venoms (C+) and a pool of IgG was incubated with PBS (C–).
Neutralization of Lethal Activity
For in vivo neutralization assays, 3 groups of 4 mice were used for each venom. Animals were injected intraperitoneally with 500 μl of a solution containing a dose corresponding to 1.5 LD50 of either M. frontalis (33 μg/20 g mouse) or M. corallinus (10.5 μg/20 g mouse) venom, pre-determined by Tanaka et al. (18) in PBS-BSA 0.1%, pre-incubated for 1 h at 37°C with either with 100 μl of a pool of sera from immunized rabbits, 100 μl coral antivenom or 100 μl of PBS. Dead animals were counted 48 h after the challenge.
Results
Immunocharacterization of Elicited Antibodies
To overcome difficulties in producing bivalent coral antivenom, we propose a combined protocol, using crude M. frontalis venom and synthetic peptides derived from M. corallinus toxins sequences. Two rabbits were immunized using the immunogen combination, as a proof-of-concept. The produced sera will be further named as anti-Venfro/Pepcor, referring that the elicited antibodies are directed against crude venom of M. frontalis and peptides derived from toxin's sequences of M. corallinus.
Antibody reactivity of anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera was assayed with both Micrurus venoms by ELISA, after each immunization dose given to animals (Figures 2A,B). Results show that the proposed immunization protocol induced antibodies able to recognize M. frontalis and M. corallinus venoms in both rabbits, although serum from rabbit 2 showed weaker binding to M. corallinus venom (Figure 2A). The first three doses in the protocol used crude M. frontalis venom. Therefore, the immune response against this venom increased more rapidly (after the 2nd dose) than against M. corallinus. On the other hand, antibody reactivity against M. corallinus continued to increase throughout the immunization protocol, whereas reactivity against M. frontalis plateaued after the 4th dose, with a slight increase after the 12th dose for serum 1. It is relevant to mention that M. corallinus peptides booster doses were able to keep serum reactivity against M. frontalis, even in the absence of this venom as antigen in the subsequent doses.
After the 12th dose, anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera were titrated against both venoms (Figures 2C,D). Antibody titers against M. corallinus were lower than against M. frontalis. Sera from rabbit 1 and 2 showed different reactivities against M. corallinus and were more homogenous against M. frontalis. However, both animals produced a satisfactory response against both venoms.
To further characterize the antigenicity of the peptides used in the immunization protocol, anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera reactivity against each individual peptide was also assessed. Except for Pep599a, all peptides were well recognized by both sera. Serum from rabbit 1 and rabbit 2 also presented similar reactivity against all peptides, with a marked difference detected only for PepPLA2a (Figure 3).
Cross-Reactivity of Produced Sera With Other Micrurus Venoms
Along with M. corallinus and M. frontalis, other species from Micrurus genus also occur in Brazil. Since the precise identification of the exact species of the offender snake is rarely made, all elapid accidents are treated with the same antivenom. Therefore, it is relevant to test cross-reactivity of the produced anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera against other Micrurus venoms.
In an ELISA assay, M. lemniscatus and M. spixii showed considerable cross-reactivity, being more strongly or equally recognized by anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera of both rabbits than M. corallinus. M. altirostris and M. surinamensis, showed a weaker, yet remarkable reactivity with both sera (Figure 4).
A Western Blot assay was also performed to characterize the immunoreactivity of anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera against several Micrurus venoms and compare them with the approved therapeutical bivalent coral antivenom produced by FUNED (Figure 5). As verified in the ELISA assays, serum from rabbit 1 showed a slightly more intense reaction with the venoms. FUNED coral antivenom reacted with bands above 38 KDa more intensely than the produced anti-Venfro/Pepcor rabbit sera.
Toxins and mapped epitope sequences were aligned to other Micrurus 3FTx (Figures 6A–D) and PLA2 (Figure 6E) toxins available at UniProt to verify sequence similarities that could explain the sera cross-reactivities verified with the tested venoms. The alignments showed that not only toxins from the tested venoms but also from other Micrurus species have similar regions, ranging from 100 to 50% of identity, that can potentially explain cross-reaction of these venoms with anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera (Figures 6, 7). Pep100 and Pep604a did not show significant similarity to other Micrurus toxins and seems to be exclusive to M. corallinus venom.
Neutralization Assays
Reactivity of the produced anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera toward different Micrurus venoms was well established using different techniques. However, antibody in vitro reactivity not always means efficient neutralization of toxic venom activities. To this end, neutralization assays of PLA2 activity and lethality were performed for M. frontalis and M. corallinus venoms.
First, PLA2 basal activity of both venoms was determined by a fluorometric (Figure 7) and by indirect hemolytic assays (Figure 8). M. frontalis showed stronger PLA2 activity in both methodologies. Two micrograms of M. frontalis venom matched positive control activity of 100%, even exceeding it a little, whereas M. corallinus barely achieved 40% of the C+ activity in the fluorometric assay.
The PLA2 neutralizing potential of the produced antibodies was tested in the indirect hemolytic assay, using different amounts of IgGs purified from anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera (6–0.375 μg) (Figure 8) incubated with 1 minimum phospholipase dose (MPD). This dose was established previously (14) for each venom: M. frontalis was 0.022 μg of venom and 1.84 μg for M. corallinus (almost 85-times less active than M. frontalis). We used purified IgGs instead of serum to avoid interference of other serum components in the assay. Phosphate buffer incubated with 6 μg of anti-Venfro/Pepcor IgGs was used as negative control and 1 MPD of each venom incubated with 6 μg of non-immune IgG was used as positive control. Consistent with its higher phospholipase activity, M. frontalis venom was less efficiently neutralized by anti-Venfro/Pepcor IgGs, achieving 100% inhibition only with the higher concentration of IgG tested. Contrary to what was observed in the immunocharacterization assays, IgGs from rabbit 2 seems to have a higher PLA2 neutralization potential than those from rabbit 1, confirming that antibody recognition of a given antigen does not mean necessarily antibody neutralization.
For the in vivo lethality neutralization (Table 1), we used 100 μl of a pool of both rabbits' sera incubated for 1 h at 37°C with an amount of venom equivalent to 1.5 LD50 of each Micrurus venom. Bivalent coral antivenom from FUNED was used as a positive control and PBS as a negative control. As expected, FUNED's antivenom fully protected animals from the venom challenge with both venoms, and the dose of 1.5 LD50 of both venoms incubated only with PBS killed 100% of injected mice. Anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera showed to have lethality neutralization potential and fully protected animals from the challenge with M. corallinus venom. However, M. frontalis venom was less efficiently neutralized by anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera, that protected only 50% of challenged animals. The assay was initially made with four animals. To confirm the difference of protection between M. corallinus and M. frontalis venom, the assay was repeated only for anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera and results were the same, indicating that indeed protection against M. corallinus venom lethality was higher when compared to M. frontalis venom.
Table 1.
Group | Survival/injected | % Survival |
---|---|---|
M. corallinus (1.5 LD50) | ||
Anti-Venfro/Pepcor | 8/8 | 100% |
Coral antivenom (C+) | 4/4 | 100% |
PBS (C–) | 0/4 | 0% |
M. frontalis (1.5 LD50) | ||
Anti-Venfro/Pepcor | 4/8 | 50% |
Coral antivenom (C+) | 4/4 | 100% |
PBS (C–) | 0/4 | 0% |
Amounts of M. corallinus or M. frontalis venom, corresponding to 1.5 DL50 were pre-incubated for 1 h at 37°C with 100 μl of either PBS (C–), commercial coral antivenom from FUNED (C+) or anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera. Animals were injected intraperitoneally, and deaths were recorded 48 h after injections.
Discussion
Bites caused by snakes from the genus Micrurus represent <1% of snakebite cases notified in Brazil, but most of the accidents are considered severe and antivenom administration is recommended primarily in all cases (19). Antivenom shortage is a worldwide health problem (20) but Brazil stands as an exception, being self-sufficient in antivenom production (21–23). Nonetheless, the production of Brazilian coral antivenom specifically faces drawbacks and its production and quality control is limited, due to the difficulty in obtaining enough amounts of coral venom (11, 24, 25).
To illustrate in figures the venom shortage in coral antivenom production, in the year of 2019, Ezequiel Dias Foundation (FUNED) has obtained until August a total of 133 mg of venom from 11 specimens of M. frontalis kept in the Foundation's Serpentarium. However, to perform the immunization protocol for coral antivenom production to supply the yearly national demand, it is necessary at least 450 mg of venom, considering the quality control tests. These numbers show that the amount of venom that has been obtained so far represents <30% of the amount needed for the production of coral antivenom. Venom yield can vary from year to year depending on several factors, but there is a general consensus among Brazilian antivenom producing Institutions that Micrurus venom availability is almost always lower than the desirable. In Brazil, coral antivenom is produced by Ezequiel Dias Foundation (FUNED), in Minas Gerais state, and by Butantan Institute, in São Paulo state. It is produced using venoms from M. corallinus and M. frontalis species as immunogens. These venoms are mostly composed of three-finger toxins (3FTx) and phospholipase A2 (PLA2), which are considered the major responsible for the envenoming symptoms caused by coral snakes. As these toxins are capable of inducing polyclonal antibodies (13), our group has identified neutralizing B-cell linear derived from them. These epitopes selection was made using the SPOT technique. Overlapping pentadecapeptides covering M. corallinus toxin's sequences were synthesized in a cellulose membrane and probed with anti-M. corallinus venom rabbit serum, FUNED and Butantan's coral antivenoms. The most reactive peptide sequences were selected, refined by immunoinformatics using the EPITOPIA epitope prediction tool (26) and used for rabbit immunization. This approach showed that synthetic peptides mimicking toxin's epitopes can improve the generation of antivenoms against coral snakes (14).
Building upon this previous approach, the present work proposes a new immunization protocol for Brazilian coral antivenom production, with a substantial reduction in the use of crude venoms, in a rabbit model. Three priming doses of M. frontalis venom and no M. corallinus venom at all would be necessary for this protocol, that was capable of eliciting neutralizing antibodies against these venoms. When compared to our previous work, which used only synthetic peptides as immunogens (14), the present protocol, using venom priming, showed an upgrade, achieving better antibody titers, neutralization potential and cross-reactivity. The produced anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera could fully protect animals challenged with a lethal dose of M. corallinus venom from death, whereas the previously produced anti-peptide sera promoted half of this protection.
Another novelty of the present work was that neutralization properties of the experimental antivenom was also tested with M. frontalis venom. Anti-Venfro/Pepcor antibodies neutralized PLA2 activity of M. frontalis venom and promoted 50% lethality protection of animals challenged with this venom. The fact that M. frontalis venom was less neutralized by our experimental antivenom than M. corallinus venom is noteworthy, considering that ELISA reactivity suggests that the elicited antibodies recognize M. frontalis venom better than M. corallinus venom. One possibility to explain the lack of M. frontalis venom neutralization by Anti-Venfro/Pepcor antibodies is the fact that, although we have used the amount related to 1.5 LD50 for both venoms in the performed challenge, the absolute venom amounts used are not the same. We considered in the assay the intra peritoneal LD50 values published by Tanaka et al. (18), being the value for M. corallinus venom 7 and 22 μg for M. frontalis venom, per 20 g of mice. Thus, in the assay, we injected a total of 10.5 μg of M. corallinus venom and 33 μg of M. frontalis venom, i.e., the absolute amount of M. frontalis venom injected in the animals was more than the triple of the amount used for M. corallinus venom. LD50 values may vary between venom batches. In the literature and in previous studies from our group, we can find intraperitoneal LD50 values for M. frontalis venom in mice ranging from 4 to 29 μg and from 5 to 27 μg for M. corallinus venom (27). As coral venoms are obtained in minor amounts, we chose to use values from the literature rather than establish the LD50 for our venoms experimentally. We chose Tanaka's work as it deals with both M. frontalis and M. corallinus venoms, allowing to use the same reference for both venoms. However, the real LD50 for our used venoms might have been different. Another possibility is that the immunological response of the host was started with M. frontalis venom as antigen, but affinity maturation may have occurred toward M. corallinus peptides. Therefore, in the final sera, anti-peptide antibodies may have prevailed rather than anti- M. frontalis venom.
Despite this incomplete neutralization toward M. frontalis venom, the present proposal was efficient as a proof-of-concept and there are still many approaches that can be readily used to improve it. The peptides used for substituting M. corallinus venom derived from sequences of only 3FTx and PLA2 toxins. These are indeed the most abundant components of Micrurus venoms (13), but there are other venom components that, despite being present in smaller amounts, can have an important role in envenoming, such as l-amino acid oxidases, metalloproteinases, c-type lectins, etc. (28). As demonstrated by Western Blot results (Figure 5), there are indeed venom protein bands with weaker binding by anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera. Peptides mimicking epitopes from these other toxin families can be incorporated into the immunization protocol to broaden antibodies reactivity and increase neutralizing potential. Also, as an improvement prospect, the immunization scheme used here can be altered, to represent M. frontalis venom in more doses along the program.
The proposed alternative protocol for coral antivenom is still a preliminary work that needs to be further validated, but extrapolating the obtained results to real situations reveals that the presented results are promising. Considering the body mass proportion between a 20 g-mouse and a 70 kg-human, our neutralization assay simulates the inoculation of 36.75 mg of M. corallinus venom or 115.5 mg of M. frontalis venom to a victim, which exceeds by far the amount of venom a Micrurus snake can inject (8). For antivenom quality control, Brazilian guidelines states that coral antivenom may have a maximum protein amount of 150 mg per mL that should be able to neutralize 1.5 mg of M. frontalis venom. Therefore, to be considered for clinical use, anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera should be able to neutralize 13.5 μg of M. frontalis venom in a neutralization assay [considering that 100 μL of rabbit serum contains 1.325 mg of IgG (29)]. As the experimental antivenom (anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera) was able to neutralize 50% of the lethality caused by 33 μg of M. frontalis venom, more than twice the required venom amount in antivenom quality control, we can consider that this protocol may be an interesting approach to coral antivenom production. We must consider carefully the situation illustrated above, since several factors such as different venom susceptibility between mice and humans and the nature of experimental and currently produced antivenom (crude rabbit serum and purified horse Fab'2, respectively) may separate the theoretical observation from reality.
M. frontalis and M. corallinus are the most common coral snakes found in Brazil, but severe accidents with different Micrurus species have been reported in Brazilian territory (30, 31). In vitro experiments demonstrated that the currently produced coral antivenom does not recognize adequately some venom components of other Micrurus species and may also poorly neutralize them (12, 32–34). Tanaka et al. showed, in 2010, (18) that coral antivenom produced by Butantan was not completely effective in neutralizing enzymatic activities from Brazilian Micrurus venoms. Remarkably, Butantan's coral antivenom was unable to completely neutralize PLA2 activity from M. frontalis venom, which is present in the immunization mixture used to produce the antivenom, whereas anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera developed in the present work was able to do so. It is also noteworthy in this previous work that Butantan's antivenom was not completely effective in neutralizing lethality from several Micrurus species (M. altirostris. M. lemniscatus, M. spixii), including M. corallinus, which is also included in the immunization pool. In another work from this same group (34), the immunogenicity of several Micrurus venoms was assessed, aiming at finding experimental basis for broadening coral antivenom reactivity. Monovalent sera toward M. altirostris, M. corallinus, M. frontalis, M. lemniscatus, M. spixii and a polyvalent serum were produced in horse. Neutralization assays performed with these produced sera showed that none of the tested immunization approaches were completely efficient, indicating that finding an ideal immunogen for coral antivenom production in Brazil is yet an unsolved issue. Confirming the low cross-neutralization of Brazilian coral antivenom, a clinical case report tells that the available therapeutic antivenom was not completely efficient in reversing the symptoms of patients bitten by Micrurus species other than the ones used in the immunization pool, even when administered early (31).
With this in view, achieving better cross-neutralization becomes an important goal for improving treatment of coral snake envenomed victims (7). Anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera showed good cross-recognition of different relevant Brazilian Micrurus venoms in ELISA, although this does not necessarily mean cross-neutralization of toxic activities (34). But still, this is an important feature of anti-Venfro/Pepcor sera that must be further explored and improved if necessary.
The main toxin families are conserved among Brazilian Micrurus venoms but there is a large variation in the individual molecules itself, probably reflecting different evolutionary adaptations to habitats, preys and predators (18). Also, less abundant venom components can differ substantially between Micrurus species (28). If an efficient coral antivenom cross-neutralization with different Micrurus species is pursued, a wider variety of molecules should be represented in the immunization mixture used in the antivenom production process.
The use of synthetic epitopes to substitute venoms in antivenom production is not novel. Our group has been working on this theme for several years, with promising results (14, 35–38). An approach similar to the present work was proposed and validated to produce brown recluse spider antivenom in horses, combining crude venom and a recombinant synthetic antigen, containing epitopes previously mapped in relevant Loxosceles spp. toxins. The combined protocol achieved neutralization parameters comparable to that obtained with venom exclusively and better than using the synthetic antigen alone. This combined protocol reduced by 67% the need for using crude venom for brown recluse spider antivenom production (39).
Venomics and antivenomics studies are increasing venom composition knowledge (40–42). Immunochemical studies that select potential epitopes to be represented as synthetic peptides or recombinant proteins may also circumvent the lack of immunogenicity observed for some toxins, including the most prevalent 3FTX and PLA2 toxins (43). This increasing knowledge plays an important role in achieving better coverage of coral antivenom, leading to a possible pan-specific antidote toward Micrurus venoms (44).
Concluding Remarks
Our results show that it is possible to produce cross-reactive, neutralizing coral antivenom substituting M. corallinus venom by synthetic peptides derived from relevant toxin sequences. This implicates in a reduced dependency on venom availability for the production of antivenom and the possibility of manipulating cross-reactivity, by adding other desired toxin-epitopes. This preliminary step can lead to enhanced production of better antivenoms, addressing the important issue of antivenom shortage and may lead toward the development of a pan-American antivenom.
In addition of the benefits for antivenom fabrication, decreasing the usage of venom for coral antivenom production would allow more venom to be assigned for studies aiming at describing Micrurus envenoming pathophysiology better and should also foment the disclosure of the biotechnological potential of Micrurus venoms.
Data Availability Statement
The datasets generated for this study are available on request to the corresponding author.
Ethics Statement
The animal study was reviewed and approved by Ethics Committee in Animal Experimentation from the Federal University of Minas Gerais.
Author Contributions
CC-O, CF, PH, and CG-D: conception and design of study. KC, LL, DO, and RM: acquisition of data. KC, LL, and CG-D: analysis and interpretation of data. CF and CC-O: contribution of reagents, materials, and analysis tools. CG-D and AP: drafting the article. KC, LL, AP, PH, CC-O, and CG-D: revised critically the final version. All authors approved the final version of the submitted manuscript.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Footnotes
Funding. This research was supported by the Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico, Brazil (CNPq) (Chamada Universal No. 28/2018, Processo: 406163/2018-9), Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior, Brazil - CAPES (TOXINOLOGIA No 23038000825/2011-63) and CAPES/COFECUB (Processo: 88881.191812/2018-01) and by Fundação de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais, Brazil (FAPEMIG).
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Data Availability Statement
The datasets generated for this study are available on request to the corresponding author.