Abstract

Chronic wounds are a major health problem that cause millions of dollars in expenses every year. Among all the treatments used, active wound treatments such as enzymatic treatments represent a cheaper and specific option with a fast growth category in the market. In particular, bacterial and plant proteases have been employed due to their homology to human proteases, which drive the normal wound healing process. However, the use of these proteases has demonstrated results with low reproducibility. Therefore, alternative sources of proteases such as snake venom have been proposed. Here, we performed a functional mining of proteases from rattlesnakes (Crotalus ornatus, C. molossus nigrescens, C. scutulatus, and C. atrox) due to their high protease predominance and similarity to native proteases. To characterize Crotalus spp. Proteases, we performed different protease assays to measure and confirm the presence of metalloproteases and serine proteases, such as the universal protease assay and zymography, using several substrates such as gelatin, casein, hemoglobin, L-TAME, fibrinogen, and fibrin. We found that all our venom extracts degraded casein, gelatin, L-TAME, fibrinogen, and fibrin, but not hemoglobin. Crotalus ornatus and C. m. nigrescens extracts were the most proteolytic venoms among the samples. Particularly, C. ornatus predominantly possessed low molecular weight proteases (P-I metalloproteases). Our results demonstrated the presence of metalloproteases capable of degrading gelatin (a collagen derivative) and fibrin clots, whereas serine proteases were capable of degrading fibrinogen-generating fibrin clots, mimicking thrombin activity. Moreover, we demonstrated that Crotalus spp. are a valuable source of proteases that can aid chronic wound-healing treatments.

Highlights

  • Chronic wounds are interruptions in the epithelial surface that endogenous resources fail to repair during a normal period of time [1]

  • The results reported here indicate the first step towards a potential for Crotalus snake venom proteases for the application as suitable wound-healing therapeutics

  • Crotalus ornatus venom was separated into 14 bands with different molecular weights (116, 75, 64, 52, 40, 31, 28, 23, 19, 16, 13.8, 13, 12.5, and 12 kDa)

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic wounds are interruptions in the epithelial surface that endogenous resources fail to repair during a normal period of time [1]. Proteases of plant (papain from Carica papaya [12] and bromelain from Ananas comosus [13]) and microbial origins (collagenase from Clostridium histolyticum or vibriolysin from Vibrio protelyticus) were the first enzymes used as wound healing active therapeutics to debride the necrotic tissue, diminish inflammation, and increase angiogenesis. These enzymes showed low reproducibility in terms of the patients’ healing outcomes [14]

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