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Toxicon | 1995

Phospholipase A2 myotoxins from Bothrops snake venoms

José María Gutiérrez; Bruno Lomonte

Several myotoxins have been isolated from Bothrops snake venoms during the last 10 years. All of them are group II basic phospholipases A2, although some lack enzymatic activity (i.e. Lys-49 variants). These myotoxins appear as an antigenically related family of proteins occurring in many, but not all, Bothrops venoms, bearing a close structural and antigenic relationship to toxins found in other crotalid venoms of the genera Agkistrodon and Trimeresurus. Myotoxins are quantitatively important venom components in some Bothrops species. Intramuscular injection of Bothrops myotoxins leads to a rapid series of drastic degenerative events, probably initiated at the plasma membrane level, which culminate in a selective skeletal muscle necrosis. This in vivo specificity contrasts with the ability of myotoxins to lyse many types of cells in culture. Muscle damage, as well as cytolysis and liposome disruption, occur in conditions where phospholipase A2 activity is inhibited, although enzymatic activity might enhance myotoxin actions. A membrane receptor for Bothrops myotoxins has not been identified yet. A working hypothesis on the mechanism of action is proposed. Current evidence suggests that these toxins interact with biological membranes via a molecular region distinct from their known catalytic site. The active region is likely to be formed by a combination of basic and hydrophobic amino acid residues near the C-terminus of the protein, which allow electrostatic interaction and bilayer penetration. These events may lead to membrane destabilization and loss of selective permeability to ions such as calcium, both of which appear to be important mediators in the process of muscle necrosis.


Inflammation | 1993

Host response to Bothrops asper snake venom : analysis of edema formation, inflammatory cells, and cytokine release in a mouse model

Bruno Lomonte; Andrej Tarkowski; Lars Å. Hanson

As part of the characterization of the host reactivity to the venom ofBothrops asper, we investigated the inflammatory responses in the mouse footpad model. The subcutaneously injected venom induced a rapid increase of serum IL-6 concentration, which peaked between 3 and 6 h and returned to normal values at 12 h. In contrast, serum TNF-α and IL-1α were not detectable at any time point studied. A myotoxic phospholipase A2 isoform purified from this venom, myotoxin II, was also able to induce a systemic IL-6 release when injected into the footpad. Both venom and myotoxin induced local edema and a leukocyte infiltrate accumulating in the muscle and subdermal tissue within 6 h. The infiltrate consisted predominantly of neutrophils at 6 and 24 h, but at later times, mononuclear cells also appeared. The edema, leukocyte infiltration, and IL-6 responses did not depend on the hemorrhagic activity of venom, since all three effects were seen after injection of (1) preneutralized venom, devoid of hemorrhagic activity, and (2) purified myotoxin II. Circulating platelet numbers were significantly decreased 30 min after venom injection and returned to normal after 12 h. The venom also induced a rapid inversion in the ratio of neutrophils to lymphocytes in peripheral blood, which did not normalize until 12 h later. The present observations suggest that venom, besides its cytotoxic properties, induces early hematologic and immunologic alterations. These findings may be of relevance in future treatment modalities.As part of the characterization of the host reactivity to the venom of Bothrops asper, we investigated the inflammatory responses in the mouse footpad model. The subcutaneously injected venom induced a rapid increase of serum IL-6 concentration, which peaked between 3 and 6 h and returned to normal values at 12 h. In contrast, serum TNF-alpha and IL-1 alpha were not detectable at any time point studied. A myotoxic phospholipase A2 isoform purified from this venom, myotoxin II, was also able to induce a systemic IL-6 release when injected into the footpad. Both venom and myotoxin induced local edema and a leukocyte infiltrate accumulating in the muscle and subdermal tissue within 6 h. The infiltrate consisted predominantly of neutrophils at 6 and 24 h, but at later times, mononuclear cells also appeared. The edema, leukocyte infiltration, and IL-6 responses did not depend on the hemorrhagic activity of venom, since all three effects were seen after injection of (1) preneutralized venom, devoid of hemorrhagic activity, and (2) purified myotoxin II. Circulating platelet numbers were significantly decreased 30 min after venom injection and returned to normal after 12 h. The venom also induced a rapid inversion in the ratio of neutrophils to lymphocytes in peripheral blood, which did not normalize until 12 h later. The present observations suggest that venom, besides its cytotoxic properties, induces early hematologic and immunologic alterations. These findings may be of relevance in future treatment modalities.


Toxicon | 1989

A new muscle damaging toxin, myotoxin II, from the venom of the snake Bothrops asper (terciopelo)

Bruno Lomonte; José María Gutiérrez

A new muscle damaging toxin, myotoxin II, was purified from the venom of Bothrops asper by ion-exchange chromatography on CM-Sephadex C-25. The toxin is a dimeric, basic protein with a monomer mol.wt of 13,341, according to the amino acid composition, and 16,000 on the basis of SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic mobility. It has a high number of aspartate and lysine residues, as well as of hydrophobic amino acids. Upon i.m. injection into mice, the toxin induces myonecrosis and increase in serum creatine kinase levels. In addition, myotoxin II induces edema in the mouse foot pad. Immunochemical tests, mol.wt, and amino acid composition indicate a high degree of homology between myotoxin II and a previously characterized myotoxin from this venom, myotoxin I. However, in contrast to myotoxin I, myotoxin II lacks phospholipase A2 and anticoagulant activities in vitro.


FEBS Letters | 2009

Venoms, venomics, antivenomics

Juan J. Calvete; Libia Sanz; Yamileth Angulo; Bruno Lomonte; José María Gutiérrez

Venoms comprise mixtures of peptides and proteins tailored by Natural Selection to act on vital systems of the prey or victim. Here we review our proteomic protocols for uncoiling the composition, immunological profile, and evolution of snake venoms. Our long‐term goal is to gain a deep insight of all viperid venom proteomes. Knowledge of the inter‐ and intraspecies ontogenetic, individual, and geographic venom variability has applied importance for the design of immunization protocols aimed at producing more effective polyspecific antivenoms. A practical consequence of assessing the cross‐reactivity of heterologous antivenoms is the possibility of circumventing the restricted availability of species‐specific antivenoms in some regions. Further, the high degree of target specificity makes toxins valuable scaffolds for drug development.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1991

Myotoxin II from Bothrops asper (Terciopelo) venom is a lysine-49 phospholipase A2.

Brian R. Francis; José María Gutiérrez; Bruno Lomonte; Ivan I. Kaiser

A basic, dimeric myotoxic protein, myotoxin II, purified from Bothrops asper venom has a similar molecular weight and is immunologically cross-reactive with antibodies raised to previously isolated B. asper phospholipases A2, except that it shows only 0.1% of the phospholipase activity against L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine in the presence of Triton X-100. Its 121 amino acid sequence, determined by automated Edman degradation, clearly identifies it as a Lys-49 phospholipase A2. Key amino acid differences between myotoxin II and phospholipase active proteins in the Ca2(+)-binding loop region, include Lys for Asp-49, Asn for Tyr-28, and Leu for Gly-32. The latter substitution has not previously been seen in Lys-49 proteins. Other substitutions near the amino terminus (Leu for Phe-5 and Gln for several different amino acids at position 11) may prove useful for identifying other Lys-49 proteins in viperid and crotalid venoms. Myotoxin II shows greater sequence identity with other Lys-49 proteins from different snake venoms (Agkistrodon piscivorus piscivorus, Bothrops atrox, and Trimeresurus flavoviridis) than with another phospholipase A2 active Asp-49 molecule isolated from the same B. asper venom. This work demonstrates that phospholipase activity per se, is not required in phospholipase molecules for either myotoxicity or edema inducing activities.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2008

Cellular pathology induced by snake venom phospholipase A2 myotoxins and neurotoxins: common aspects of their mechanisms of action

Cesare Montecucco; José María Gutiérrez; Bruno Lomonte

Abstract.A large variety of snake toxins evolved from PLA2 digestive enzymes through a process of ‘accelerated evolution’. These toxins have different tissue targets, membrane receptors and mechanisms of alteration of the cell plasma membrane. Two of the most commonly induced effects by venom PLA2s are neurotoxicity and myotoxicity. Here, we will discuss how these snake toxins achieve a similar cellular lesion, which is evolutionarily highly conserved, despite the differences listed above. They cause an initial plasma membrane perturbation which promotes a large increase of the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration leading to cell degeneration, following modes that we discuss in detail for muscle cells and for the neuromuscular junction. The different systemic pathophysiological consequences caused by these toxins are not due to different mechanisms of cell toxicity, but to the intrinsic anatomical and physiological properties of the targeted tissues and cells.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2005

Medicinal Plants with Inhibitory Properties Against Snake Venoms

Andreimar M. Soares; Fábio K. Ticli; Silvana Marcussi; Miriam Verginia Lourenço; Ana Helena Januário; Suely V. Sampaio; José R. Giglio; Bruno Lomonte; Paulo Pereira

Envenomations due to snake bites are commonly treated by parenteral administration of horse or sheep-derived polyclonal antivenoms aimed at the neutralization of toxins. However, despite the widespread success of this therapy, it is still important to search for different venom inhibitors, either synthetic or natural, that could complement or substitute for the action of antivenoms. Several plants have been utilized in folk medicine as antiophidian. However, only a few species have been scientifically investigated and still less had their active components isolated and characterized both structurally and functionally. This article presents a review of plants showing neutralizing properties against snake venoms which were assayed in research laboratories, correlating them with ethnopharmacological studies, as (i) the part of the plant used as antidote, (ii) its respective genus and family and (iii) inhibition of the main pharmacological, toxic and enzymatic activities of snake venoms and isolated toxins. Protective activity of many of these plants against the lethal action of snake venoms has been confirmed by biological assays. Compounds in all of them belong to chemical classes capable of interacting with macromolecular targets (enzymes or receptors). Popular culture can often help to guide scientific studies. In addition, biotechnological application of these inhibitors, as helpful alternative or supplemental treatments to serum therapy, and also as important models for synthesis of new drugs of medical interest, needs to be better oriented and scientifically explored.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Snake venomics of the Central American rattlesnake Crotalus simus and the South American Crotalus durissus complex points to neurotoxicity as an adaptive paedomorphic trend along Crotalus dispersal in South America.

Juan J. Calvete; Libia Sanz; Pedro Cid; Pilar de la Torre; Marietta Flores-Díaz; M. Cristina Dos Santos; Adolfo Borges; Adolfo Bremo; Yamileth Angulo; Bruno Lomonte; Alberto Alape-Girón; José María Gutiérrez

We report a comparative venomic and antivenomic characterization of the venoms of newborn and adult specimens of the Central American rattlesnake, Crotalus simus, and of the subspecies cumanensis, durissus, ruruima, and terrificus of South American Crotalus durissus. Neonate and adult C. simus share about 50% of their venom proteome. The venom proteome of 6-week-old C. simus is predominantly made of the neurotoxic heterodimeric phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2) crotoxin) (55.9%) and serine proteinases (36%), whereas snake venom Zn(2+)-metalloproteinases (SVMPs), exclusively of class PIII, represent only 2% of the total venom proteins. In marked contrast, venom from adult C. simus comprises toxins from 7 protein families. A large proportion (71.7%) of these toxins are SVMPs, two-thirds of which belong to the PIII class. These toxin profiles correlate well with the overall biochemical and pharmacological features of venoms from adult (hemorrhagic) and newborn (neurotoxic) C. simus specimens. The venoms of the South American Crotalus subspecies belong to one of two distinct phenotypes. C. d. cumanensis exhibits high levels of SVMPs and low lethal potency (LD(50)), whereas C. d. subspecies terrificus, ruruima, and durissus have low SVMP activity and high neurotoxicity to mice. Their overall toxin compositions explain the outcome of envenomation by these species. Further, in all C. simus and C. durissus venoms, the concentration of neurotoxins (crotoxin and crotamine) is directly related with lethal activity, whereas lethality and metalloproteinase activity show an inverse relationship. The similar venom toxin profiles of newborn C. simus and adult C. durissus terrificus, ruruima, and durissus subspecies strongly suggests that the South American taxa have retained juvenile venom characteristics in the adult form (paedomorphism) along their North-South stepping-stone dispersal. The driving force behind paedomorphism is often competition or predation pressure. The increased concentration of the neurotoxins crotoxin and crotamine in South American rattlesnake venoms strongly argues that the gain of neurotoxicity and lethal venom activities to mammals may have represented the key axis along which overall venom toxicity has evolved during Crotalus durissus invasion of South America. The paedomorphic trend is supported by a decreasing LNC (lethal neurotoxicity coefficient, defined as the ratio between the average LD(50) of the venom and the crotoxin + crotamine concentration) along the North-South axis, coincident with the evolutionary dispersal pattern of the Neotropical rattlesnakes. The indistinguisable immunoreactivity patterns of Costa Rican and Venezuelan polyvalent antivenoms toward C. simus and C. durissus venoms strongly suggest the possibility of using these antivenoms indistinctly for the management of snakebites by adult C. simus and by certain C. d. cumanensis populations exhibiting a hemorrhagic venom phenotype. The antivenomic results also explain why the antivenoms effectively neutralize the hemorrhagic activity of adult C. simus venoms but does not protect against adult C. durissus sp. and newborn C. simus envenomations. The identification of evolutionary trends among tropical Crotalus, as reported here, may have an impact in defining the mixture of venoms for immunization to produce an effective pan-American anti-Crotalus antivenom.


Biochimie | 2000

Myotoxic phospholipases A2 in Bothrops snake venoms: Effect of chemical modifications on the enzymatic and pharmacological properties of bothropstoxins from Bothrops jararacussu

Silvia H. Andrião-Escarso; Andreimar M. Soares; Veridiana M. Rodrigues; Yamileth Angulo; Cecilia Díaz; Bruno Lomonte; José María Gutiérrez; José R. Giglio

Venoms from eight Bothrops spp. were fractionated by ion-exchange chromatography on CM-Sepharose at pH 8.0 for the purification of myotoxins. Chromatographic profiles showed differences regarding myotoxic components among these venoms. B. alternatus, B. atrox and B. jararaca venoms did not show the major basic myotoxic fractions identified in the other venoms. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis for basic proteins also showed distinct patterns for these toxins. In vivo, all the isolated myotoxins induced release of creatine kinase due to necrosis of muscle fibers, accompanied by polymorphonuclear cell infiltration, and edema in the mouse paw. In addition, the toxins showed cytotoxic and liposome-disrupting activities in vitro. B. jararacussu bothropstoxins-I (BthTX-I) and II (BthTX-II) were submitted to chemical modifications of: His, by 4-bromophenacyl bromide (BPB) or photooxidation by Rose Bengal (RB); Tyr, by 2-nitrobenzenesulphonyl fluoride (NBSF); and Trp, by o-nitrophenylsulphenyl chloride (NPSC). The myotoxic and cytotoxic activities of BthTX-I, a Lys49 PLA(2) homologue, after modification by BPB, RB, NBSF and NPSC, were reduced to 50%, 20%, 75%, 65% and 13%, 0.5%, 76%, 58%, respectively. However, the edema-inducing and liposome-disrupting activities were not significantly reduced by the above modifications. BPB-treated BthTX-II, an Asp49 PLA(2) homologue, lost most of its catalytic, indirect hemolytic, anticoagulant, myotoxic and cytotoxic activities. The edema-inducing and liposome-disrupting activities were reduced to 50% and 80%, respectively. Lethality caused by BthTX-I and -II was strongly reduced after treatment with BPB or RB, but only partially with NBSF or NPSC. BthTX-I and -II, both native or modified, migrated similarly in a charge-shift electrophoresis. Antibodies raised against BthTX-I or -II, B. asper Basp-II and the C-terminal 115-129 peptide from Basp-II did not show significant differences in their cross-reactivity with the modified toxins, except with RB photooxidized toxins.


Toxicon | 1999

Comparative study of the cytolytic activity of myotoxic phospholipases A2 on mouse endothelial (tEnd) and skeletal muscle (C2C12) cells in vitro

Bruno Lomonte; Yamileth Angulo; Stefano Rufini; Wonhwa Cho; José R. Giglio; Motonori Ohno; José J. Daniele; Patricia A. Geoghegan; José María Gutiérrez

A rapid in vitro cytolytic effect of some myotoxic phospholipases A2 (PLA2s) isolated from the venoms of Viperidae snakes has been previously described. This study was undertaken to investigate if cytolytic activity is a common property of the myotoxic proteins from this group. Murine endothelial cells (tEnd) and skeletal muscle myotubes (C2C12) were utilized as targets. The release of lactic dehydrogenase was quantified as a measure of cell damage, 3 h after exposure of cells to the different PLA2s, including representatives from the genera Bothrops, Agkistrodon, Trimeresurus, Crotalus (family Viperidae), and Notechis (family Elapidae). All of the group II myotoxic PLA2s tested displayed rapid cytolytic activity when tested in the micromolar range of concentrations (8-32 microM). In contrast, the group I myotoxic PLA2 notexin was devoid of this activity. Aspartate-49 and lysine-49 PLA2 group II variants showed a comparable cytolytic effect. Skeletal muscle myotubes, obtained after fusion and differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts, were significantly more susceptible to the cytolytic action of myotoxins than endothelial cells, previously reported to be more susceptible than undifferentiated myoblasts under the same assay conditions. Cytolytic activity appears to be a common characteristic of group II myotoxic PLA2s of the Viperidae. Bee venom PLA2, a group III enzyme of known myotoxicity, also displayed cytotoxic activity on C2C12 myotubes, being devoid of activity on endothelial cells. These results suggest that in vitro differentiated skeletal muscle myotubes may represent a suitable model target for the study of myotoxic PLA2s of the structural group II found in snake venoms.

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Juan J. Calvete

Polytechnic University of Valencia

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Libia Sanz

University of Costa Rica

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Gustavo Rojas

University of Costa Rica

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