| Literature DB >> 31345151 |
María Emilia Garcia Denegri1, Soledad Bustillo1, Claudia Carolina Gay1, Andrea Van De Velde1, Gabriela Gomez1, Silvina Echeverría1, María Del Carmen Gauna Pereira1, Silvana Maruñak2, Sandra Nuñez2, Fabián Bogado2, Matías Sanchez2, Gladys Pamela Teibler2, Luciano Fusco1, Laura Cristina Ana Leiva1.
Abstract
Among the ophidians that inhabit the Northeast of Argentina, the genus Bothrops such as B. alternatus and B. diporus species (also known as yararás) and Crotalus durisus terrificus (named cascabel), represent the most studied snake venom for more than thirty years. These two genera of venomous snakes account for the majority of poisonous snake envenomations and therefore, constitute a medical emergency in this region. This review presents a broad description of the compiled knowledge about venomous snakebite: its pathophysiological action, protein composition, isolated toxins, toxin synergism, toxin-antitoxin cross-reaction assays. Properties of some isolated toxins support a potential pharmacological application. Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.Entities:
Keywords: Bothrops alternatus; Bothrops diporus; Crotalus durisus terrificus; Crotoxin; Metalloproteinases; Phospholipases A2; Serine/thrombin-like proteinases; Serinoproteases; Snake venom.
Year: 2019 PMID: 31345151 DOI: 10.2174/1568026619666190725094851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Top Med Chem ISSN: 1568-0266 Impact factor: 3.295