Abstract

Serum Anti Ular Bisa (SABU) is the only snake antivenom produced locally in Indonesia; however, its effectiveness has not been rigorously evaluated. This study aimed to assess the protein composition and neutralization efficacy of SABU. SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, size-exclusion liquid chromatography and shotgun proteomics revealed that SABU consists of F(ab’)2 but a significant amount of dimers, protein aggregates and contaminant albumins. SABU moderately neutralized Calloselasma rhodostoma venom (potency of 12.7 mg venom neutralized per ml antivenom, or 121.8 mg venom per g antivenom protein) and Bungarus fasciatus venom (0.9 mg/ml; 8.5 mg/g) but it was weak against the venoms of Naja sputatrix (0.3 mg/ml; 2.9 mg/g), Naja sumatrana (0.2 mg/ml; 1.8 mg/g) and Bungarus candidus (0.1 mg/ml; 1.0 mg/g). In comparison, NPAV, the Thai Neuro Polyvalent Antivenom, outperformed SABU with greater potencies against the venoms of N. sputatrix (0.6 mg/ml; 8.3 mg/g), N. sumatrana (0.5 mg/ml; 7.1 mg/g) and B. candidus (1.7 mg/ml; 23.2 mg/g). The inferior efficacy of SABU implies that a large antivenom dose is required clinically for effective treatment. Besides, the antivenom contains numerous impurities e.g., albumins that greatly increase the risk of hypersensitivity. Together, the findings indicate that the production of SABU warrants further improvement.

Highlights

  • Serum Anti Ular Bisa (SABU) is the only snake antivenom produced locally in Indonesia; its effectiveness has not been rigorously evaluated

  • It is derived from the sera of horses which have been hyperimmunized against the venoms from three snake species of Indonesian origin: the Javan spitting cobra (Naja sputatrix, ular sendok Jawa), the Malayan pit viper (Calloselasma rhodostoma, ular tanah) and the banded krait (Bungarus fasciatus, ular welang)

  • Coupling SDS-PAGE, size-exclusion fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC) and LCMS/MS, this study unveiled the proteome of the Indonesian antivenom Serum Anti Bisa Ular (SABU), verifying that it is an F(ab’)[2] antivenom product that contains a significant amount of protein aggregates and contaminant albumins

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Summary

Introduction

Serum Anti Ular Bisa (SABU) is the only snake antivenom produced locally in Indonesia; its effectiveness has not been rigorously evaluated. SABU is formulated as a trispecific or trivalent antivenom for clinical use in Indonesia (except the region east of the Wallace’s line and West Papua) It is derived from the sera of horses which have been hyperimmunized against the venoms from three snake species of Indonesian origin: the Javan spitting cobra (Naja sputatrix, ular sendok Jawa), the Malayan pit viper (Calloselasma rhodostoma, ular tanah) and the banded krait (Bungarus fasciatus, ular welang). This is an antivenom packaged in liquid form, demanding cold-chain transport and stringent storage condition maintained between 2–8 °C. It is hoped that the findings will provide insights into the strength and weakness of the Indonesian antivenom, and shed light on how the production and the use of the antivenom can be optimized

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