Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Practical progress towards the development of r...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming. / Menzies, Stefanie; Patel, Rohit N; Ainsworth, Stuart.
In: Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery, Vol. 20, No. 6, 03.06.2025, p. 799-819.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineReview articlepeer-review

Harvard

Menzies, S, Patel, RN & Ainsworth, S 2025, 'Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming', Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery, vol. 20, no. 6, pp. 799-819. https://doi.org/10.1080/17460441.2025.2495943

APA

Vancouver

Menzies S, Patel RN, Ainsworth S. Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming. Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery. 2025 Jun 3;20(6):799-819. Epub 2025 Apr 29. doi: 10.1080/17460441.2025.2495943

Author

Menzies, Stefanie ; Patel, Rohit N ; Ainsworth, Stuart. / Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming. In: Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery. 2025 ; Vol. 20, No. 6. pp. 799-819.

Bibtex

@article{927a9a50c7e94401863a1fd615ed9a8e,
title = "Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming",
abstract = "IntroductionSnakebite envenoming is a neglected tropical disease that affects millions globally each year. In recent years, research into the potential production of recombinant antivenoms, formulated using mixtures of highly defined anti-toxin monoclonal antibodies, has rapidly moved from a theoretical concept to demonstrations of practical feasibility.Areas coveredThis article examines the significant practical advancements in transitioning recombinant antivenoms from concept to potential clinical translation. The authors have based their review on literature obtained from Google Scholar and PubMed between September and November 2024. Coverage includes the development and validation of recombinant antivenom antibody discovery strategies, the characterization of the first broadly neutralizing toxin class antibodies, and recent translational proof-of-concept experiments.Expert opinionThe transition of recombinant antivenoms from a {\textquoteleft}concept{\textquoteright} to the current situation where high-throughput anti-venom mAb discovery is becoming routine, accompanied by increasing evidence of their broad neutralizing capacity in vivo, has been extraordinary. It is now important to build on this momentum by expanding the discovery of broadly neutralizing mAbs to encompass as many toxin classes as possible. It is anticipated that key demonstrations of whether recombinant antivenoms can match or surpass existing conventional polyvalent antivenoms in terms of neutralizing scope and capacity will be achieved in the next few years.",
author = "Stefanie Menzies and Patel, {Rohit N} and Stuart Ainsworth",
year = "2025",
month = jun,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1080/17460441.2025.2495943",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "799--819",
journal = "Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Practical progress towards the development of recombinant antivenoms for snakebite envenoming

AU - Menzies, Stefanie

AU - Patel, Rohit N

AU - Ainsworth, Stuart

PY - 2025/6/3

Y1 - 2025/6/3

N2 - IntroductionSnakebite envenoming is a neglected tropical disease that affects millions globally each year. In recent years, research into the potential production of recombinant antivenoms, formulated using mixtures of highly defined anti-toxin monoclonal antibodies, has rapidly moved from a theoretical concept to demonstrations of practical feasibility.Areas coveredThis article examines the significant practical advancements in transitioning recombinant antivenoms from concept to potential clinical translation. The authors have based their review on literature obtained from Google Scholar and PubMed between September and November 2024. Coverage includes the development and validation of recombinant antivenom antibody discovery strategies, the characterization of the first broadly neutralizing toxin class antibodies, and recent translational proof-of-concept experiments.Expert opinionThe transition of recombinant antivenoms from a ‘concept’ to the current situation where high-throughput anti-venom mAb discovery is becoming routine, accompanied by increasing evidence of their broad neutralizing capacity in vivo, has been extraordinary. It is now important to build on this momentum by expanding the discovery of broadly neutralizing mAbs to encompass as many toxin classes as possible. It is anticipated that key demonstrations of whether recombinant antivenoms can match or surpass existing conventional polyvalent antivenoms in terms of neutralizing scope and capacity will be achieved in the next few years.

AB - IntroductionSnakebite envenoming is a neglected tropical disease that affects millions globally each year. In recent years, research into the potential production of recombinant antivenoms, formulated using mixtures of highly defined anti-toxin monoclonal antibodies, has rapidly moved from a theoretical concept to demonstrations of practical feasibility.Areas coveredThis article examines the significant practical advancements in transitioning recombinant antivenoms from concept to potential clinical translation. The authors have based their review on literature obtained from Google Scholar and PubMed between September and November 2024. Coverage includes the development and validation of recombinant antivenom antibody discovery strategies, the characterization of the first broadly neutralizing toxin class antibodies, and recent translational proof-of-concept experiments.Expert opinionThe transition of recombinant antivenoms from a ‘concept’ to the current situation where high-throughput anti-venom mAb discovery is becoming routine, accompanied by increasing evidence of their broad neutralizing capacity in vivo, has been extraordinary. It is now important to build on this momentum by expanding the discovery of broadly neutralizing mAbs to encompass as many toxin classes as possible. It is anticipated that key demonstrations of whether recombinant antivenoms can match or surpass existing conventional polyvalent antivenoms in terms of neutralizing scope and capacity will be achieved in the next few years.

U2 - 10.1080/17460441.2025.2495943

DO - 10.1080/17460441.2025.2495943

M3 - Review article

VL - 20

SP - 799

EP - 819

JO - Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery

JF - Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery

IS - 6

ER -