The Asian Age

IIT- Delhi students develop cheaper drug for snake bites

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

◗ The estimated number of snake bites around the world is as high as 1.84 resulting in death of more than 1 million people every year

Students at the prestigiou­s Indian Institute of Technology ( IIT) here have produced what could be a cheaper and more effective solution for neutralisi­ng the toxic effect of snake venom.

The research has been done in collaborat­ion with San Jose University, US.

“Purificati­on of peptides offers unique challenges with respect to obtaining the desired process yield and selectivit­y. Lethal Toxin-Neutralisi­ng Factor ( LTNF) is a peptide that is known to neutralise snake venom. A process for producing highly purified recombinan­t LTNF has been developed,” said Anurag Rathore, one of the researcher­s.

Researcher­s at IIT- Delhi have developed a process to manufactur­e LTNF using recombinan­t DNA technology and has filed for a patent for the same. The product has shown efficacy against rattlesnak­e and viper venoms and is undergoing further testing. If successful, LTNF based therapy will offer a more costeffect­ive as well as stable substitute for currently available anti- venoms against snakebite.

Snakebite has been a neglected disease for decades until the World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) included it in the list of tropical neglected diseases in 2009.

“Snakebite can cause tissue necrosis, severe haemorrhag­ing, paralysis, heart failure, and other significan­t effects depending on the type of snake and severity of the bite. The estimated number of snake bites around the world is as high as 1.84 resulting in death of more than 1 million people every year. More than a lakh die every year in India,” he said.

“There was a dire need for designing a process for manufactur­ing antivenom that is cheaper and more effective,” he added.

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