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      Investigating snake venom variation to mitigate snakebite envenomation in Indonesia

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          Abstract

          Snakebite envenoming is one of the neglected tropical diseases and is still rarely studied in Indonesia. The high diversity of venomous snakes in Indonesia is one of the challenges. To overcome this, we consider that snake venomic research guided by phylogenetic relationships can serve valuable information that may contribute to snakebite mitigation. Here, we briefly introduce our recent study using HPLC-MS/MS to analyse the venom composition and variation across four Indonesian Trimeresurus. This adds more information on venom variation among Trimeresurus species within the close geographic origin, which congruent with their phylogenetic relationships. We also conducted a preliminary study to detect intraspecific variation between the venom of males and females of T. puniceus using SDS-PAGE. There is an addition of protein with a molecular weight of 13 kDa in the venom of male T. puniceus, while a protein with a molecular weight of 16 kDa is only detected in female venom. We summarize recent studies showing different factors that can affect venom variation between and within snake species. Finally, we discuss the importance of transdisciplinary research to understand snake venom variation and suggest future directions, particularly from a herpetological view, to mitigate human-snake conflict in Indonesia.

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          Most cited references31

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          A Review and Database of Snake Venom Proteomes

          Advances in the last decade combining transcriptomics with established proteomics methods have made possible rapid identification and quantification of protein families in snake venoms. Although over 100 studies have been published, the value of this information is increased when it is collated, allowing rapid assimilation and evaluation of evolutionary trends, geographical variation, and possible medical implications. This review brings together all compositional studies of snake venom proteomes published in the last decade. Compositional studies were identified for 132 snake species: 42 from 360 (12%) Elapidae (elapids), 20 from 101 (20%) Viperinae (true vipers), 65 from 239 (27%) Crotalinae (pit vipers), and five species of non-front-fanged snakes. Approximately 90% of their total venom composition consisted of eight protein families for elapids, 11 protein families for viperines and ten protein families for crotalines. There were four dominant protein families: phospholipase A2s (the most common across all front-fanged snakes), metalloproteases, serine proteases and three-finger toxins. There were six secondary protein families: cysteine-rich secretory proteins, l-amino acid oxidases, kunitz peptides, C-type lectins/snaclecs, disintegrins and natriuretic peptides. Elapid venoms contained mostly three-finger toxins and phospholipase A2s and viper venoms metalloproteases, phospholipase A2s and serine proteases. Although 63 protein families were identified, more than half were present in <5% of snake species studied and always in low abundance. The importance of these minor component proteins remains unknown.
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            Causes and Consequences of Snake Venom Variation

            Snake venoms are mixtures of toxins that vary extensively between and within snake species. This variability has serious consequences for the management of the world’s 1.8 million annual snakebite victims. Advances in ‘omic’ technologies have empowered toxinologists to comprehensively characterize snake venom compositions, unravel the molecular mechanisms that underpin venom variation, and elucidate the ensuing functional consequences. In this review, we describe how such mechanistic processes have resulted in suites of toxin isoforms that cause diverse pathologies in human snakebite victims and we detail how variation in venom composition can result in treatment failure. Finally, we outline current therapeutic approaches designed to circumvent venom variation and deliver next-generation treatments for the world’s most lethal neglected tropical disease.
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              Diet and snake venom evolution.

              Venom composition within snake species can show considerable geographical variation, an important consideration because bites by conspecific populations may differ in symptomatology and require different treatments. The underlying causes of this phenomenon have never been explained. Here we present evidence that the variation in the venom of the pitviper Calloselasma rhodostoma (Serpentes: Viperidae) is closely associated with its diet. We also evaluated other possible causes of geographic variation in venom using partial Mantel tests and independent contrasts, but rejected both contemporary gene flow (estimated from geographical proximity) and the phylogenetic relationships (assessed by analysis of mitochondrial DNA) among populations as important influences upon venom evolution. As the primary function of viperid venom is to immobilize and digest prey and prey animals vary in their susceptibility to venom, we suggest that geographical variation in venom composition reflects natural selection for feeding on local prey.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BIO Web of Conferences
                BIO Web Conf.
                EDP Sciences
                2117-4458
                2024
                March 25 2024
                2024
                : 94
                : 04018
                Article
                10.1051/bioconf/20249404018
                4f4c13bd-86c9-4b10-a266-d23e13335865
                © 2024

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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