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Repurposed drugs and their combinations prevent morbidity-inducing dermonecrosis caused by diverse cytotoxic snake venoms

Medicine and Health

Repurposed drugs and their combinations prevent morbidity-inducing dermonecrosis caused by diverse cytotoxic snake venoms

S. R. Hall, S. A. Rasmussen, et al.

Did you know that snakebite envenoming affects around 400,000 people each year, often resulting in severe, life-altering injuries? Research by Steven R. Hall and colleagues reveals that repurposed drugs like DMPS, marimastat, and varespladib can significantly reduce tissue damage from snake venoms, even after an hour post-envenoming. This groundbreaking work could transform treatments for this neglected tropical disease!... show more
Abstract
Morbidity from snakebite envenoming affects approximately 400,000 people annually. Tissue damage at the bite-site often leaves victims with catastrophic life-long injuries and is largely untreatable by current antivenoms. Repurposed small molecule drugs that inhibit specific snake venom toxins show considerable promise for tackling this neglected tropical disease. Using human skin cell assays as an initial model for snakebite-induced dermonecrosis, we show that the drugs 2,3-dimercapto-1-propanesulfonic acid (DMPS), marimastat, and varespladib, alone or in combination, inhibit the cytotoxicity of a broad range of medically important snake venoms. Thereafter, using pre-clinical mouse models of dermonecrosis, we demonstrate that the dual therapeutic combinations of DMPS or marimastat with varespladib significantly inhibit the dermonecrotic activity of geographically distinct and medically important snake venoms, even when the drug combinations are delivered one hour after envenoming. These findings strongly support the future translation of repurposed drug combinations as broad-spectrum therapeutics for preventing morbidity caused by snakebite.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Dec 14, 2023
Authors
Steven R. Hall, Sean A. Rasmussen, Edouard Crittenden, Charlotte A. Dawson, Keirah E. Bartlett, Adam P. Westhorpe, Laura-Oana Albulescu, Jeroen Kool, José María Gutiérrez, Nicholas R. Casewell
Tags
snakebite
envenoming
dermonecrosis
drug repurposing
antivenom alternatives
toxin inhibition
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