Snake venomics and toxicological profiling of the arboreal pitviper Bothriechis supraciliaris from Costa Rica

Fecha

2012-04

Autores

Lomonte, Bruno
Tsai, Wan-Chih
Bonilla Murillo, Fabián
Solórzano López, Alejandro
Solano Trejos, María Gabriela
Angulo Ugalde, Yamileth
Gutiérrez, José María
Calvete Chornet, Juan José

Título de la revista

ISSN de la revista

Título del volumen

Editor

Resumen

The genus Bothriechis comprises a lineage of nine species of Neotropical pitvipers distributed mainly in highlands across Middle America, all adapted to arboreal habitats. Bothriechis supraciliaris is a relatively recently described species that inhabits the Pacific southwest of Costa Rica, whose venom had never been studied. A proteomic and toxicological profiling of its venom is here reported. Proteins or peptides that belong to eleven families were found, with a predominance of bradykinin-potentiating peptides (21.9%), followed by serine proteinases (15.2%) and phospholipases A2 (13.4%). A group of short polyglycine peptides, resembling the poly-His/poly-Gly metalloproteinase inhibitors described in Atheris and Echis snake venoms, was observed for the first time in a Bothriechis venom. Comparison of the venom proteome of B. supraciliaris with those of Bothriechis schlegelii, Bothriechis lateralis, and Bothriechis nigroviridis, confirms the highly diverse toxicological strategies evolved by these arboreal snakes in each case, as possible alternative solutions to the same trophic purpose. Toxicological profiling of B. supraciliaris venom revealed a potent hemorrhagic action, moderate myotoxicity, and very weak procoagulant activity. Importantly from the medical perspective, the lethal activity of its venom (mouse intraperitoneal LD50: 7.1 μg/g) was efficiently neutralized by a polyvalent (Viperidae) antivenom of therapeutic use in Central America.

Descripción

2082/04 Embargo por política editorial

Palabras clave

Snake venom, Viperidae, Proteomics, Venomics, Mass spectrometry, Arboreal, Bothriechis supraciliaris

Citación

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0041010112000232

Colecciones