Literature DB >> 32686412

Danger in the Canopy. Comparative Proteomics and Bioactivities of the Venoms of the South American Palm Pit Viper Bothrops bilineatus Subspecies bilineatus and smaragdinus and Antivenomics of B. b. bilineatus (Rondônia) Venom against the Brazilian Pentabothropic Antivenom.

Libia Sanz1, Sarai Quesada-Bernat1, Alicia Pérez1, Karen De Morais-Zani2, Sávio S SantˈAnna2, Daniela M Hatakeyama2, Lidia J Tasima2, Moisés B De Souza3, Anderson M Kayano4, Alfonso Zavaleta5, Maria Salas5, Andreimar M Soares4,6,7,8, Leonardo de A Calderón4,6, Anita M Tanaka-Azevedo2, Bruno Lomonte9, Juan J Calvete1, Cleópatra A S Caldeira4,6.   

Abstract

We report a structural and functional proteomics characterization of venoms of the two subspecies (Bothrops bilineatus bilineatus and B. b. smaragdinus) of the South American palm pit viper from the Brazilian state of Rondônia and B. b. smaragdinus from Perú. These poorly known arboreal and mostly nocturnal generalist predators are widely distributed in lowland rainforests throughout the entire Amazon region, where they represent an important cause of snakebites. The three B. bilineatus spp. venom samples exhibit overall conserved proteomic profiles comprising components belonging to 11 venom protein classes, with PIII (34-40% of the total venom proteins) and PI (8-18%) SVMPs and their endogenous tripeptide inhibitors (SVMPi, 8-10%); bradykinin-potentiating-like peptides (BBPs, 10.7-15%); snake venom serine proteinases (SVSP, 5.5-14%); C-type lectin-like proteins (CTL, 3-10%); phospholipases A2 (PLA2, 2.8-7.6%); cysteine-rich secretory proteins (CRISP, 0.9-2.8%); l-amino acid oxidases (LAO, 0.9-5%) representing the major components of their common venom proteomes. Comparative analysis of the venom proteomes of the two geographic variants of B. b. smaragdinus with that of B. b. bilineatus revealed that the two Brazilian taxa share identical molecules between themselves but not with Peruvian B. b. smaragdinus, suggesting hybridization between the geographically close, possibly sympatric, Porto Velho (RO, BR) B. b. smaragdinus and B. b. bilineatus parental populations. However, limited sampling does not allow determining the frequency of this event. The toxin arsenal of the South American palm pit vipers may account for the in vitro recorded collagenolytic, caseinolytic, PLA2, l-amino acid oxidase, thrombin-like and factor X-activating activities, and the clinical features of South American palm pit viper envenomings, i.e., local and progressively ascending pain, shock and loss of consciousness, spontaneous bleeding, and profound coagulopathy. The remarkable cross-reactivity of the Brazilian pentabothropic SAB antivenom toward the heterologous B. b. bilineatus venom suggests that the paraspecific antigenic determinants should have been already present in the venom of the last common ancestor of the Bothrops ″jararaca″ and ″taeniatus″ clades, about 8.5 Mya in the mid-late Miocene epoch of the Cenozoic era. The mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited to the ProteomeXchange Consortium via the PRIDE partner repository with the data set identifiers PXD020043, PXD020026, and PXD020013.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bothrops bilineatus; Brazilian pentabothropic antivenom; Comparative snake venomics; South American palm viper; antivenomics

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32686412     DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.0c00337

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Proteome Res        ISSN: 1535-3893            Impact factor:   4.466


  6 in total

1.  Clinical and Evolutionary Implications of Dynamic Coagulotoxicity Divergences in Bothrops (Lancehead Pit Viper) Venoms.

Authors:  Lachlan Allan Bourke; Christina N Zdenek; Anita Mitico Tanaka-Azevedo; Giovanni Perez Machado Silveira; Sávio Stefanini Sant'Anna; Kathleen Fernandes Grego; Caroline Fabri Bittencourt Rodrigues; Bryan Grieg Fry
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-22       Impact factor: 5.075

2.  Antivenomics and in vivo preclinical efficacy of six Latin American antivenoms towards south-western Colombian Bothrops asper lineage venoms.

Authors:  Diana Mora-Obando; Davinia Pla; Bruno Lomonte; Jimmy Alexander Guerrero-Vargas; Santiago Ayerbe; Juan J Calvete
Journal:  PLoS Negl Trop Dis       Date:  2021-02-01

3.  A Clot Twist: Extreme Variation in Coagulotoxicity Mechanisms in Mexican Neotropical Rattlesnake Venoms.

Authors:  Lorenzo Seneci; Christina N Zdenek; Abhinandan Chowdhury; Caroline F B Rodrigues; Edgar Neri-Castro; Melisa Bénard-Valle; Alejandro Alagón; Bryan G Fry
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-03-11       Impact factor: 7.561

Review 4.  Investigating Toxin Diversity and Abundance in Snake Venom Proteomes.

Authors:  Theo Tasoulis; Tara L Pukala; Geoffrey K Isbister
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2022-01-14       Impact factor: 5.810

Review 5.  Bothrops bilineatus: An Arboreal Pitviper in the Amazon and Atlantic Forest.

Authors:  Paulo Sérgio Bernarde; Manuela Berto Pucca; Ageane Mota-da-Silva; Wirven Lima da Fonseca; Marllus Rafael Negreiros de Almeida; Isadora Sousa de Oliveira; Felipe Augusto Cerni; Felipe Gobbi Grazziotin; Marco A Sartim; Jacqueline Sachett; Fan Hui Wen; Ana Maria Moura-da-Silva; Wuelton M Monteiro
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 7.561

6.  Divergent Specialization of Simple Venom Gene Profiles among Rear-Fanged Snake Genera (Helicops and Leptodeira, Dipsadinae, Colubridae).

Authors:  Peter A Cerda; Jenna M Crowe-Riddell; Deise J P Gonçalves; Drew A Larson; Thomas F Duda; Alison R Davis Rabosky
Journal:  Toxins (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-15       Impact factor: 5.075

  6 in total

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