| Literature DB >> 28775316 |
Tarek Mohamed Abd El-Aziz1,2,3, Corinne Ravelet4,5, Jordi Molgo6, Emmanuelle Fiore7,8, Simon Pale9, Muriel Amar6, Sawsan Al-Khoury1,2, Jérôme Dejeu7,10, Mahmoud Fadl3, Michel Ronjat1,2, Germain Sotoing Taiwe10, Denis Servent6, Eric Peyrin7,8, Michel De Waard11,12,13.
Abstract
Medical means to save the life of human patients affected by drug abuse, envenomation or critical poisoning are currently limited. While the compounds at risks are most often well identified, particularly for bioterrorism, chemical intervention to counteract the toxic effects of the ingested/injected compound(s) is restricted to the use of antibodies. Herein, we illustrate that DNA aptamers, targeted to block the pharmacophore of a poisonous compound, represent a fast-acting and reliable method of neutralization in vivo that possesses efficient and long-lasting life-saving properties. For this proof of concept, we used one putative bioweapon, αC-conotoxin PrXA, a marine snail ultrafast-killing paralytic toxin, to identify peptide-binding DNA aptamers. We illustrate that they can efficiently neutralize the toxin-induced (i) displacement of [125I]-α-bungarotoxin binding onto nicotinic receptors, (ii) inhibition of diaphragm muscle contraction, and (iii) lethality in mice. Our results demonstrate the preclinical value of DNA aptamers as fast-acting, safe and cheap antidotes to lethal toxins at risk of misuse in bioterrorism and offer hope for an alternative method than donor sera to treat cases of envenomation.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28775316 PMCID: PMC5543128 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-07554-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Toxin lethality and aptamer selection. (a) Dose-response curve illustrating αC-conotoxin PrXA-mediated mice death. i.p. and s.c. injection. (b) Shortening of the latency of death induction as a function of αC-conotoxin PrXA concentration. (c) Binding affinities of D7, B4 and S1 scramble aptamers towards 20 nM FAM-αC-conotoxin PrXA using fluorescence polarization. r: anisotropy of FAM-αC-conotoxin PrXA in presence of aptamer, rf: anisotropy of free FAM-αC-conotoxin PrXA.
Figure 2In vitro evaluation of aptamer neutralization properties. (a) Dose-response curve of αC-conotoxin PrXA-mediated inhibition of 1 nM [125I]-α-BgTx binding. (b) Effect of D7 aptamer on αC-conotoxin PrXA-mediated inhibition of [125I]-α-BgTx binding. (c) Effect of B4 aptamer on αC-conotoxin PrXA-mediated inhibition of [125I]-α-BgTx binding. (d) Time-dependent inhibition of muscle contraction by 0.31 µM αC-conotoxin PrXA (left inset). Lack of toxin effect on direct muscle stimulation (right inset). (e) αC-conotoxin PrXA dose-dependence of muscle contraction inhibition. IC50 = 23 nM. (f) Effect of D7 and B4 aptamers on 28 nM αC-conotoxin PrXA-mediated inhibition of muscle contraction. D7 at 20x molar, B4 at 45x molar concentration. (g) Waglerin 1 dose-dependence of muscle contraction inhibition. (h) Effect of D7 aptamer on waglerin 1-mediated inhibition of muscle contraction. N.S.: nonspecific; ***: p ≤ 0.001.
Figure 3In vivo evaluation of aptamer neutralization properties. (a) Time of death of mice induced by 0.5 µg toxin/g mouse b.w. as a function of D7 aptamer concentration. t = 0 min toxin injection (s.c. or i.p.), t = 1 min aptamer injection (i.v.). (b) Mice survival as a function of i.v.-injected D7 aptamer concentration. (c) Lack of effect of scramble oligonucleotides on αC-conotoxin PrXA-mediated death. (d) Lack of effect of D7, D3 and A5 aptamers on waglerin 1-mediated mice death.