High-density peptide microarray exploration of the antibody response in a rabbit immunized with a neurotoxic venom fraction
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Authors
Engmark, Mikael Gerling
Jespersen, Martin Closter
Lomonte, Bruno
Lund, Ole
Laustsen, Andreas Hougaard
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Abstract
Polyvalent snakebite antivenoms derive their therapeutic success from the ability of their antibodies to
neutralize venom toxins across multiple snake species. This ability results from a production process
involving immunization of large mammals with a broad suite of toxins present in venoms. As a result of
immunization with this wide range of toxins, many polyvalent antivenoms have a high degree of crossreactivity
to similar toxins in other snake venoms e a cross-reactivity which cannot easily be deconvoluted.
As a proof of concept, we aimed at exploring the opposite scenario by performing a highthroughput
evaluation of the extent of cross-reactivity of a polyclonal mixture of antibodies that was
raised against only a single snake venom fraction. For this purpose, a venom fraction containing short
neurotoxin 1 (SN-1; Uniprot accession number P01416, three-finger toxin (3FTx) family), which is the
medically most important toxin from the notorious black mamba (Dendroaspis polylepis), was employed.
Following immunization of a rabbit, a specific polyclonal antibody response was confirmed by ELISA and
immunodiffusion. Subsequently, these antibodies were investigated by high-density peptide microarray
to reveal linear elements of recognized epitopes across 742 3FTxs and 10 dendrotoxins. This exploratory
study demonstrates in a single immunized animal that cross-reactivity between toxins of high similarity
may be difficult to obtain when immunizing with a single 3FTx containing venom fraction. Additionally,
this study explored the influence of employing different lengths of peptides in high-density peptide
microarray experiments for identification of toxin epitopes. Using 8-mer, 12-mer, and 15-mer peptides, a
single linear epitope element was identified in SN-1 with high precision.
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Keywords
Epitope mapping, Single toxin immunization, Three-finger toxin, Dendroaspis polylepis, Short neurotoxin, Snake venom
Citation
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0041010117302738?via%3Dihub#!