Proteomic profiling, functional characterization, and immunoneutralization of the venom of Porthidium porrasi, a pitviper endemic to Costa Rica
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Méndez Argüello, Rebeca
Bonilla Murillo, Fabián
Sasa Marín, Mahmood
Dwyer, Quetzal
Fernández Ulate, Julián
Lomonte, Bruno
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Abstract
The genus Porthidium includes nine pitviper species inhabiting Mexico, Central America, and northern South
America. Porthidium porrasi is a species endemic to the Southwest of Costa Rica, for which no information on its
venom was available. In this study, the proteomic composition and functional activities of P. porrasi venom are
described. The most abundant venom proteins were identified as metalloproteinases (36.5%). In descending
order of abundance, proteins belonging to the disintegrin, phospholipase A2, serine proteinase, C-type lectin/
lectin-like, vascular endothelial growth factor, Cysteine-rich secretory protein, L-amino acid oxidase, phospholipase
B, and phosphodiesterase families were also identified. P. porrasi venom showed a weak lethal potency
in mice (10 μg/g body weight by intraperitoneal route), induced marked hemorrhage and edema, and weak
myotoxic effect. These in vivo activities, as well as those assayed in vitro (proteolytic and phospholipase A2
activities) correlated with compositional data. A comparison of P. porrasi venom with those of three other
Porthidium species studied to date reveals a generally conserved compositional and functional pattern in this
pitviper genus. Importantly, the lethal effect of P. porrasi venom in mice was adequately cross-neutralized by a
heterospecific polyvalent antivenom, supporting its use in the treatment of eventual envenomings by this species.
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Keywords
Snake venom, Porthidium porrasi, Pitviper, Venomics, Proteome, Toxicity, Neutralization
Citation
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0001706X19301056?via%3Dihub