Division of BioAnalytical Chemistry, Amsterdam Institute for Molecules Medicines and Systems, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Centre for Snakebite Research & Interventions, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2020 Apr 1;14(4):e0007802. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0007802. eCollection 2020 Apr.
Snakebite is a neglected tropical disease that results in a variety of systemic and local pathologies in envenomed victims and is responsible for around 138,000 deaths every year. Many snake venoms cause severe coagulopathy that makes victims vulnerable to suffering life-threating haemorrhage. The mechanisms of action of coagulopathic snake venom toxins are diverse and can result in both anticoagulant and procoagulant effects. However, because snake venoms consist of a mixture of numerous protein and peptide components, high throughput characterizations of specific target bioactives is challenging. In this study, we applied a combination of analytical and pharmacological methods to identify snake venom toxins from a wide diversity of snake species that perturb coagulation. To do so, we used a high-throughput screening approach consisting of a miniaturised plasma coagulation assay in combination with a venom nanofractionation approach. Twenty snake venoms were first separated using reversed-phase liquid chromatography, and a post-column split allowed a small fraction to be analyzed with mass spectrometry, while the larger fraction was collected and dispensed onto 384-well plates. After fraction collection, any solvent present in the wells was removed by means of freeze-drying, after which it was possible to perform a plasma coagulation assay in order to detect coagulopathic activity. Our results demonstrate that many snake venoms simultaneously contain both procoagulant and anticoagulant bioactives that contribute to coagulopathy. In-depth identification analysis from seven medically-important venoms, via mass spectrometry and nanoLC-MS/MS, revealed that phospholipase A2 toxins are frequently identified in anticoagulant venom fractions, while serine protease and metalloproteinase toxins are often associated with procoagulant bioactivities. The nanofractionation and proteomics approach applied herein seems likely to be a valuable tool for the rational development of next-generation snakebite treatments by facilitating the rapid identification and fractionation of coagulopathic toxins, thereby enabling specific targeting of these toxins by new therapeutics such as monoclonal antibodies and small molecule inhibitors.
蛇咬伤是一种被忽视的热带病,会导致中毒受害者出现多种全身和局部病理,并导致每年约有 13.8 万人死亡。许多蛇毒会引起严重的凝血功能障碍,使受害者容易发生危及生命的出血。凝血功能障碍蛇毒毒素的作用机制多种多样,既可以产生抗凝作用,也可以产生促凝作用。然而,由于蛇毒由多种蛋白质和肽类成分组成,因此对特定靶标生物活性物质进行高通量表征具有挑战性。在这项研究中,我们应用了分析和药理学方法的组合,从广泛多样性的蛇种中鉴定出扰乱凝血的蛇毒毒素。为此,我们使用了一种高通量筛选方法,该方法包括微型化血浆凝血测定法与蛇毒纳米分级分离法相结合。首先使用反相液相色谱法分离 20 种蛇毒,然后通过柱后分流允许一小部分用质谱分析,而大部分则收集并分配到 384 孔板上。在收集完馏分后,通过冷冻干燥去除孔中的任何溶剂,然后可以进行血浆凝血测定以检测凝血功能障碍活性。我们的结果表明,许多蛇毒同时含有促凝和抗凝生物活性物质,这会导致凝血功能障碍。通过质谱和 nanoLC-MS/MS 对七种具有医学重要性的毒液进行深入的鉴定分析,发现磷脂酶 A2 毒素经常在抗凝毒液馏分中被鉴定出来,而丝氨酸蛋白酶和金属蛋白酶毒素通常与促凝生物活性相关。本文应用的纳米分级分离和蛋白质组学方法似乎是通过促进凝血功能障碍毒素的快速鉴定和分级分离,从而使新疗法(如单克隆抗体和小分子抑制剂)能够针对这些毒素进行特异性靶向,为下一代蛇咬伤治疗的合理开发提供了有价值的工具。