抗蛇毒血清
眼镜蛇
蛇咬伤
重组DNA
眼镜蛇
蛇形纲
毒液
医学
生物
环境化
计算机科学
生态学
生物化学
基因
程序设计语言
作者
Shirin Ahmadi,Nick J. Burlet,Melisa Bénard-Valle,Alid Guadarrama-Martínez,Samuel R Kerwin,Iara Aimê Cardoso,Amy E. Marriott,Rebecca J. Edge,Edouard Crittenden,Édgar Neri-Castro,Monica L. Fernández‐Quintero,Giang Thi Tuyet Nguyen,Carol O’Brien,Yessica Wouters,Konstantinos Kalogeropoulos,Suthimon Thumtecho,Tasja Wainani Ebersole,Camilla Holst Dahl,Emily U. Glegg-Sørensen,Tom G. T. Jansen
出处
期刊:Nature
[Nature Portfolio]
日期:2025-10-29
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41586-025-09661-0
摘要
Each year, snakebite envenoming claims thousands of lives and causes severe injury to victims across sub-Saharan Africa, many of whom depend on antivenoms derived from animal plasma as their sole treatment option1. Traditional antivenoms are expensive, can cause adverse immunological reactions, offer limited efficacy against local tissue damage and are often ineffective against all medically relevant snake species2. There is thus an urgent unmet medical need for innovation in snakebite envenoming therapy. However, developing broad-spectrum treatments is highly challenging owing to the vast diversity of venomous snakes and the complex and variable composition of their venoms3. Here we addressed this challenge by immunizing an alpaca and a llama with the venoms of 18 different snakes, including mambas, cobras and a rinkhals, constructing phage display libraries, and identifying high-affinity broadly neutralizing nanobodies. We combined eight of these nanobodies into a defined oligoclonal mixture, resulting in an experimental polyvalent recombinant antivenom that was capable of neutralizing seven toxin families or subfamilies. This antivenom effectively prevented venom-induced lethality in vivo across 17 African elapid snake species and markedly reduced venom-induced dermonecrosis for all tested cytotoxic venoms. The recombinant antivenom performed better than a currently used plasma-derived antivenom and therefore shows considerable promise for comprehensive, continent-wide protection against snakebites by all medically relevant African elapids.
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