4.1 Article

Cytotoxic and inflammatory potential of a phospholipase A(2) from Bothrops jararaca snake venom

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40409-018-0170-y

Keywords

Snake venom; Bothrops jararaca; Phospholipase A(2); Inflammation; Cytotoxicity

Funding

  1. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES)
  2. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2011/23236-4]
  3. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [476,932/2012-2]
  4. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) (Programa Editorial CNPq/CAPES) [26/2017, 440954/2017-7]
  5. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) through Programa Editoracao CAPES [13/2016, 0722/2017, 88,881.142062/2017-01]

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BackgroundSnake venom phospholipases A(2) (PLA(2)s) have been reported to induce myotoxic, neurotoxic, hemolytic, edematogenic, cytotoxic and proinflammatory effects. This work aimed at the isolation and functional characterization of a PLA(2) isolated from Bothrops jararaca venom, named BJ-PLA(2)-I.Methods and ResultsFor its purification, three consecutive chromatographic steps were used (Sephacryl S-200, Source 15Q and Mono Q 5/50 GL). BJ-PLA(2)-I showed acidic characteristics, with pI4.4 and molecular mass of 14.2kDa. Sequencing resulted in 60 amino acid residues that showed high similarity to other Bothrops PLA(2)s, including 100% identity with BJ-PLA(2), an Asp49 PLA(2) previously isolated from B. jararaca venom. Being an Asp49 PLA(2), BJ-PLA(2)-I showed high catalytic activity, and also inhibitory effects on the ADP-induced platelet aggregation. Its inflammatory characterization showed that BJ-PLA(2)-I was able to promote leukocyte migration in mice at different concentrations (5, 10 and 20g/mL) and also at different response periods (2, 4 and 24h), mainly by stimulating neutrophil infiltration. Furthermore, increased levels of total proteins, IL-6, IL-1 and PGE(2) were observed in the inflammatory exudate induced by BJ-PLA(2)-I, while nitric oxide, TNF-, IL-10 and LTB4 levels were not significantly altered. This toxin was also evaluated for its cytotoxic potential on normal (PBMC) and tumor cell lines (HL-60 and HepG2). Overall, BJ-PLA(2)-I (2.5-160g/mL) promoted low cytotoxicity, with cell viabilities mostly varying between 70 and 80% and significant values obtained for HL-60 and PBMC only at the highest concentrations of the toxin evaluated.ConclusionsBJ-PLA(2)-I was characterized as an acidic Asp49 PLA(2) that induces acute local inflammation and low cytotoxicity. These results should contribute to elucidate the action mechanisms of snake venom PLA(2)s.

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