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Scientists at IISc Bengaluru develop antibody against deadly snakebite toxin

IISc said the antibody’s efficacy was nearly 15 times that of the conventional product.
Last Updated : 22 February 2024, 08:17 IST

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A safer antidote

In a subsequent experiment on animal models, the researchers pre-mixed the antibody with a toxic 3FTx produced by the Taiwanese banded krait and injected it into mice. While mice given just the toxin died within four hours, those given the toxin-antibody mix survived past the 24-hour observation and looked healthy.

Similar results were achieved against the venom of the monocled cobra from eastern India and the black mamba from sub-Saharan Africa. IISc said the antibody’s efficacy was nearly 15 times that of the conventional product.

“Crucially, when they first injected the venom and then gave the antibody after a time delay – 0 minutes, 10 minutes, and 20 minutes – the antibody was still able to save mice. The conventional product, however, only worked well when injected alongside the venom,” it said. 

Since human-derived cell lines were used for the antibody, animals need not be harmed with injections. Secondly, the use of an entirely human antibody rules out side effects from conventional antivenom.

The researchers are working toward antibodies against other snake venom toxin targets.

“A universal antivenom in the future would consist of a couple of such synthetic antibodies that would hopefully neutralise venoms of most snakes in various parts of the world. A universal product, or at least a cocktail of antibodies that work pan-India, could then be taken to human clinical trials,” Sunagar said.

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Published 22 February 2024, 08:17 IST

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