National Post

Component in venom can slow virus: study

Molecule could be used to fight COVID-19

- Leonardo benassatto

SAO PAULO • Brazilian researcher­s have found that a molecule in the venom of a type of snake inhibited coronaviru­s reproducti­on in monkey cells, a possible first step toward a drug to combat the virus causing COVID-19.

A study published in the scientific journal Molecules this month found that the molecule produced by the jararacuss­u pit viper inhibited the virus’s ability to multiply in monkey cells by 75 per cent.

“We were able to show this component of snake venom was able to inhibit a very important protein from the virus,” said Rafael Guido, a University of Sao Paulo professor and an author of the study.

The molecule is a peptide, or chain of amino acids, that can connect to an enzyme of the coronaviru­s called PLPRO, which is vital to reproducti­on of the virus, without hurting other cells.

Already known for its antibacter­ial qualities, the peptide can be synthesize­d in the laboratory, Guido said in an interview, making the capture or raising of the snakes unnecessar­y.

“We’re wary about people going out to hunt the jararacuss­u around

THIS COMPONENT OF SNAKE VENOM WAS ABLE TO INHIBIT A VERY IMPORTANT PROTEIN.

Brazil, thinking they’re going to save the world ... That’s not it!” said Giuseppe Puorto, a herpetolog­ist running the Butantan Institute’s biological collection in Sao Paulo. “It’s not the venom itself that will cure the coronaviru­s.”

Researcher­s will next evaluate the efficiency of different doses of the molecule and whether it is able to prevent the virus from entering cells in the first place, according to a statement from the State University of Sao Paulo (Unesp), which was also involved in the research.

They hope to test the substance in human cells but gave no timeline.

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