Lindert Benedictus1, Rutger D Luteijn2, Henny Otten3, Robert Jan Lebbink2, Peter J S van Kooten1, Emmanuel J H J Wiertz2, Victor P M G Rutten4, Ad P Koets5. 1. Department of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 2. Department of Medical Microbiology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 3. Laboratory of Translational Immunology, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 4. 1] Department of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands [2] Department of Veterinary Tropical Diseases, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Pretoria, Onderstepoort, South Africa. 5. 1] Department of Infectious Diseases and Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands [2] Department of Farm Animal Health, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
Abstract
Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia (BNP), a fatal bleeding syndrome of neonatal calves, is caused by maternal alloantibodies absorbed from colostrum and is characterized by lymphocytopenia, thrombocytopenia and bone marrow hypoplasia. An inactivated viral vaccine is the likely source of alloantigens inducing BNP-associated alloantibodies in the dam. In this study the specificity of BNP alloantibodies was assessed and was linked to the pathology of BNP. We demonstrated that Major Histocompatibility Complex class I (MHC I) and Very Late Antigen-3, an integrin α3/β1 heterodimer, were the major targets of BNP alloantibodies. However, alloantibody binding to various bovine cell types correlated with MHC I expression, rather than integrin β1 or α3 expression. Likewise, alloantibody-dependent complement-mediated cell lysis correlated strongly with MHC I expression. Examination of several tissues of third trimester bovine foetuses revealed that cells, shown to be affected in calves with BNP, were characterized by high MHC class I expression and high levels of alloantibody binding. We conclude that in spite of the heterogeneous specificity of BNP associated maternal alloantibodies, MHC I-specific antibodies mediate the pathogenicity of BNP in the calf and that cells with high MHC I expression were preferentially affected in BNP.
BovineNeonatal Pancytopenia (BNP), a fatal bleeding syndrome of neonatal calves, is caused by maternal alloantibodies absorbed from colostrum and is characterized by lymphocytopenia, thrombocytopenia and bone marrow hypoplasia. An inactivated viral vaccine is the likely source of alloantigens inducing BNP-associated alloantibodies in the dam. In this study the specificity of BNP alloantibodies was assessed and was linked to the pathology of BNP. We demonstrated that Major Histocompatibility Complex class I (MHC I) and Very Late Antigen-3, an integrin α3/β1 heterodimer, were the major targets of BNP alloantibodies. However, alloantibody binding to various bovine cell types correlated with MHC I expression, rather than integrin β1 or α3 expression. Likewise, alloantibody-dependent complement-mediated cell lysis correlated strongly with MHC I expression. Examination of several tissues of third trimester bovine foetuses revealed that cells, shown to be affected in calves with BNP, were characterized by high MHC class I expression and high levels of alloantibody binding. We conclude that in spite of the heterogeneous specificity of BNP associated maternal alloantibodies, MHC I-specific antibodies mediate the pathogenicity of BNP in the calf and that cells with high MHC I expression were preferentially affected in BNP.
BNP-associated alloantibodies recognize MHC class I and bind cells with a diverse MHC class I background
First, we tested the specificity of BNP-associated alloantibodies and assessed how frequently alloepitope (mis)matches between bovine cell donors, vaccine and BNP dams occur. PBMC isolated from non-BNP and BNP dams were stained with IgG isolated from the serum or colostrum of two different BNP dams. Figure 1a shows the broad recognition and almost equal staining of PBMC from different donors by BNP alloantibodies, despite the diverse MHC I background of cell donors (see Supplementary Table SI online). There was no difference in staining of PBMC isolated from BNP or non-BNP dams. To further test the specificity of BNP alloantibodies, cell lines from different species were stained with IgG isolated from BNP dams (Fig. 1b). BNP alloantibodies reacted with Cho-K1 cells (Chinese Hamster) and Horse PBMC, showing that BNP alloantibodies recognized targets across species. BNP alloantibodies did not bind self PBMC (Fig. 1c). This confirms that tolerance to autoantigens was not broken and that there is a “gap” in the repertoire of BNP alloantibodies for self MHC I.
Figure 1
BNP alloantibodies recognize cells from a diverse MHC class I background.
(a) Bovine PBMC isolated from non-BNP (n = 12) and BNP (n = 10) dams were stained with IgG isolated from the colostrum or serum of two dams. PBMC and IgG donors were MHC class I haplotyped and haplotyping results are listed online in Supplementary Table SI. (b) Cells from different species were stained with IgG isolated from BNP dams. Data are representative for three different BNP Ab donors. COS-7 = African green monkey. CHO-K1 = Chinese hamster. SP-20 = Mouse. THP-1 = Human. HEK-293 = Human. Live cells were gated on forward and sideward scatter. (c) PBMC isolated from three dams were cross-stained with IgG isolated from the same animals to test whether alloantibodies recognize autoantigens. The horizontal dotted line depicts the average GMFI of PBMC staining by autologous IgG. In all experiments Ab staining was measured using flow cytometry. GMFI = Geometric Mean Fluorescent Intensity.
BNP-associated alloantibodies recognize Integrin beta-1, alpha-3 and MHC I, but the majority of Abs have MHC I specificity
TAP inhibition leads to MHC I down-regulation and to assess the proportion of BNP alloantibodies that recognize MHC I, we used MDBK cells expressing the Bovine Herpes Virus-1-derived TAP inhibitor UL49.516. Both MHC I expression and BNP Ab binding were reduced on MDBK cells transduced with the viral TAP inhibitor (Fig. 3a), again confirming that BNP alloantibodies recognized MHC I. However, the reduction in BNP Ab binding was lower than the MHC I down regulation, indicating that BNP alloantibodies also recognized non-MHC I targets.
Figure 3
MHC class I is a major, but not the only, target of BNP-associated alloantibodies.
Identification of proteins precipitated with sera from BNP dams.
Proteina
Calculated MW
Sequence coverage (%)
Number of peptides
Integrin alpha-3
117 kDa
19% (Sample 1)
82
20% (Sample 2)
86
Integrin beta-1
91 kDa
21% (Sample 1)
86
21% (Sample 2)
75
aPrecipitated target Ags of BNP sera on B2M KO MDBK cells were identified using nano-liquid chromatography and subsequent mass spectrometry.
Binding of BNP Abs to various cell types and BNP antibody-dependent complement-mediated cell lysis correlates with MHC I expression, not Integrin beta-1 expression.
We compared the degree of MHC I and integrin beta-1 expression to the level of BNP Ab binding of wild-type and B2M KO MDBK cells, peripheral blood leukocytes (PBLk) and platelets (Fig. 5 and Supplementary Figure S2 online). MHC I expression was high on wild-type MDBK cells and on PBMC, but was low on granulocytes, very low on platelets and absent on B2M KO MDBK cells. Integrin beta-1 expression showed a different pattern, with comparable expression levels on PBMC and granulocytes, intermediate expression on platelets and very high expression on both B2M KO and wild-type MDBK cells. BNP Ab binding on PBLk and platelets correlated with MHC I expression, rather than integrin beta-1 expression. We examined target Ags of BNP Abs on PBLk by immunoprecipitation. As shown in Fig. 4d, MHC I was immunoprecipitated on PBLk, whereas integrin beta-1 and alpha-3 were not, indicating BNP Abs only bind MHC I on PBLk.
Figure 5
Expression of MHC class I, Integrin beta-1 and BNP Ab binding on wild-type (WT) and B2M knockout (KO) MDBK cells and PBLk.
WT and B2M KO MDBK cells and PBLk (n = 2, donor 1 & 2) were stained with mAbs against MHC class I (MHC I), Integrin beta-1 (ITGB1) or with BNP Abs. Expression/Ab binding was measured using flow cytometry. GMFI = Geometric Mean Fluorescent Intensity.
All nucleated cell express MHC I, but as shown in Fig. 5 the expression levels of MHC I can differ greatly between cell types. We therefore investigated whether MHC I expression levels had implications for the pathogenic effects of BNP-associated alloantibodies. A recent study showed that BNP alloantibodies could induce complement-mediated lysis of MDBK cells18. MHC I mAb dependent complement-mediated cell lysis was lower in TAP-inhibited than in control MDBK cells (Fig. 6a), correlating with MHC I expression as found in Fig. 3a. Next, the same assay was performed using sera from several BNP dams (Fig. 6b). Complement-mediated cell lysis was significantly lower for TAP-inhibited MDBK cells compared to the control cell line (p = 0.0019), indicating that BNP Ab dependent complement-mediated cell lysis correlated with MHC I expression. MHC I expression is higher on PBMC than on granulocytes and MHC I mAb dependent complement-mediated lysis of PBLk strongly increased the granulocyte/PBMC ratio (Fig. 6c,d), reflecting the killing of PBMC rather than granulocytes. Similarly, incubating PBLk with serum or colostrum from BNP dams significantly increased the granulocyte/PBMC ratio (Fig. 6d). Tracking cell numbers using beads confirmed that, despite low BNP alloantibody binding and low MHC I expression, granulocytes were not lysed after BNP Ab mediated complement dependent cell lysis of PBLk (see Supplementary Figure S3 online). Together these data show that BNP antibody-mediated complement dependent lysis strongly correlates with MHC I expression and that cells with high MHC I expression are killed predominantly. In line with this, BNP antibody-mediated complement dependent cell lysis of B2M KO MDBK cells was lower than that of wild type-MDBK cells (p < 0.001, Fig. 6e). Despite the lack of MHC I expression, complement lysis of B2M KO MDBK cells appeared to be higher for sera from BNP dams than for control sera. Although this effect was not statistically significant (p = 0.0571, Fig. 6e), this indicates that non-MHC I alloantibodies may also activate complement and could in theory lead to cell lysis in vivo.
Figure 6
BNP antibody-dependent complement-mediated lysis of cells correlates with MHC class I expression.
Cells affected in Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia are characterized by high MHC class I expression
After colostrum is taken up by the calf, maternal Abs are absorbed via intestinal cells and are transported throughout the body via the circulation. Indeed, alloantibodies were detected in the blood of BNPcalves (data not shown). Nevertheless, only certain cell types are affected in BNP (i.e. lymphocytes, platelets and bone marrow cells), whereas endothelial cells which are in close contact with the absorbed alloantibodies are unaffected16. We investigated whether differential MHC I expression and BNP alloantibody binding of different cell types could explain these observations. Endothelial and bone marrow cells were isolated from third trimester foetal calves (7–9 months of gestation) and stained with MHC I mAbs and BNP alloantibodies (Fig. 7a–c). As shown in Fig. 7a, MHC I expression and BNP Ab binding was much lower on endothelial cells than on PBMC. Bone marrow cells were characterized by populations of high or low MHC I expression (Fig. 7b, upper panels) and these populations were also characterized by high or low BNP alloantibody binding, respectively (Fig. 7b, lower panels). Confocal images of bone marrow cells showed that megakaryocytes have high MHC I expression (Fig. 7c). MHC I bright and dim uni-nucleated cells, as seen with flow cytometry, were also observed on these images. Cryopreserved bone marrow cells isolated from a neonatal calf were divided into cells with high and low BNP Ab binding and we examined integrin beta-1 and MHC I expression in both populations (Fig. 7d). Although integrin beta-1 expression was somewhat lower in bone marrow cells with low BNP Ab binding, MHC I expression of bone marrow cells correlated much better to BNP Ab binding. Together these data showed that the cell types affected in BNP were characterized by high MHC I expression and high BNP alloantibody binding.
Figure 7
Cell types affected in Bovine Neonatal Pancytopenia are characterized by high MHC class I expression.
(a–c) Bone marrow and endothelial cells were isolated from late gestation bovine foetuses (n = 3). MHC class I expression and BNP Ab binding was assessed using flow cytometry (a,b) and confocal imaging (c). Data are representative for three different animals. (a) Endothelial cells were mixed with peripheral blood leukocytes from a healthy donor to compare MHC class I expression and BNP Ab binding between tissues. Endothelial cells and PBMC/Granulocytes were selected on forward and sideward scatter (FSC and SSC) and on CD31high and CD31low expression, respectively. Expression index = Δ Ab/Δ Isotype. (b) MHC class I expression and BNP Ab binding of bone marrow cells. Bone marrow cells divided into MHC class Ihigh and MHC class Ilow expression (upper panel) were compered for BNP alloantibody binding (lower panel). Cells were gated on live cells based on FSC and SSC (confirmed with DAPI) and on autofluorescent-negative cells. (c) Confocal images of bone marrow cells stained with isotype, anti-MHC class I or anti-CD41 (Green). DAPI (blue) was used as a nuclear stain. Megakaryocytes are cells with large nuclei and anti-CD41 was used as a positive control for megakaryocytes. (d) Cryopreserved bone marrow cells isolated from a neonatal calf were measured using flow cytometry to evaluate MHC class I and Integrin beta-1 expression of cells with low and high BNP Ab binding. Intact cells were gated based on FSC and SSC and dead cells were excluded using DAPI staining. Data are representative for Abs isolated from two different BNP dams.
Immunoprecipitation and visualization/identification of precipitated protein
Cell surface proteins of MDBK cells or PBLk were labeled with EZ-Link™Sulfo-NHS-SS-Biotin (Thermo Scientific) according to manufacturer’s instructions. After biotinylation, cells were stained in serum diluted 1:20 and incubated at 4 °C for 45 min on a head-over-head roller. To assure binding of extracellular proteins only, cells were washed four times to wash away unbound and non-specifically bound Abs. Cells were lysed with ice-cold lysis buffer (1.0% Triton X-100, 20 mM MES, 100 mM NaCl, 30 mM Tris, pH 7.5) supplemented with protease inhibitors (cOmplete Protease Inhibitor Cocktails, Roche Life Sciences) at 4 °C for 30 min on a head-over-head roller. Supernatant, obtained after centrifugation (18,000 × g; 4 °C; 20 min), was incubated with Protein G coupled Dynabeads (Life Technologies) at 20 °C for 20 min on a head-over-head roller. After washing four times in lysis buffer, samples were boiled (95 °C; 5 min) in non-reducing lithium dodecyl sulphate sample buffer (Thermo Scientific). Beads were removed and samples were subjected to PAGE on Amersham ECL Gel 4–20% (GE Healthcare). Proteins were transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane (Protran, Whatman) using a semi-dry blotting system (Trans Blot Semi Dry, BioRad). The membrane was blocked with blocking reagent for ELISA (Roche). Biotinylated cell surface proteins were detected with alkaline phosphatase (AP) conjugated streptavidin (Sigma). MHC I was detected with anti-MHC I (ILA88) and AP conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Southern Biotech). Signals were developed with NBT/BCIP (Roche life sciences).Non-biotinylated immunoprecipitated protein samples were processed in parallel and visualized using GelCode Blue Stain Reagent (Thermo Scientific) after PAGE. Bands corresponding to the bands found in the Western blots were excised as indicated in Fig. 4c and were sent for mass spectrometry analysis (Alphalyse Inc.). In short, protein samples were reduced and alkylated with iodoacetamide and trypsin digested, subjected to nano-liquid chromatography on an Ultimate 3000 system (Dionex) and subsequent MS/MS analysis on an Impact QTOF instrument (Bruker Maxis). The MS/MS spectra were analysed using Mascot (Matrix Science) and the UniProt and NCBI protein database were searched to identify protein matches.
Antibody-dependent complement-mediated cell lysis
To assess antibody-dependent complement-mediated cell lysis, cells were incubated with Ab (monoclonal Abs anti-MHC I ILA88 & PT85a diluted to 0.5 μg/ml, serum of BNP or control dams diluted 1:100–1:400 for incubation with cell lines and 1:10 for incubation with PBLk) for 30 min at RT. Next, baby rabbit serum (Abd Serotec) was added to a final dilution of 1:10 and cells were incubated at 37 °C and 5% CO2 for 60 min. Following staining with DAPI, cell lysis was assessed using flow cytometry.
Statistical analyses
Protein sequence homology was analysed using Mega6 to construct a phylogenetic tree using the Neighbor-Joining method and tree distances were calculated using the number of amino acid differences. Protein alignments were performed in Bioedit 7.2.5. The use of specific statistical tests (GraphPad Software) is mentioned in the figures legends. P values < 0.05 were considered significant.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Benedictus, L. et al. Pathogenicity of BovineNeonatal Pancytopenia-associated vaccine-induced alloantibodies correlates with Major Histocompatibility Complex class I expression. Sci. Rep. 5, 12748; doi: 10.1038/srep12748 (2015).
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