A bitten man of 800 snakes can help scientists create “global” anti -antibiotics By cover October, 2025
Scientists may soon be able to develop a global antibiotic that can provide protection against all snake bites.
Scientists are approaching the invention thanks to the blood of Tim Freddy, a biopsy -trained world with excessive immunity against some of the most bloody snake toxins.
Freddy has spent the past two decades in training the immune system through more than 800 snake birds. He had a snake layers of cobra, Taybans, Black Mambas, Ratters and more.
Centivax in the field of biotechnology is developing the Universal Anti-Venom and the CEO of Jacob Ganville told Freddy, “I love to get some of your blood.”
This does not seem to be an easy task because the snake’s poison consists of approximately 70 cm and different snakes have different groups. This makes it difficult to have one global hostility because it may be effective against one type of snake but it is ineffective against the other.
Centivax discovered that all snake toxins are made of 10 protein differences. “We can make a cocktail of antibodies that can be global antibiotics,” Glaville said.
He said that Freddy’s flood would be useful because antibodies in the latter’s blood may work against many protein structures.
The company has already manufactured control at a time that provides protection against 300 types of Elapid family snakes including cobra, mambas, Taipans and Kraits.
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