| Literature DB >> 27297520 |
Evy Goossens1, Stefanie Verherstraeten1, Bonnie R Valgaeren2, Bart Pardon2, Leen Timbermont1, Stijn Schauvliege3, Diego Rodrigo-Mocholí3, Freddy Haesebrouck1, Richard Ducatelle1, Piet R Deprez2, Filip Van Immerseel4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bovine necrohemorrhagic enteritis is caused by Clostridium perfringens type A. Due to the rapid progress and fatal outcome of the disease, vaccination would be of high value. In this study, C. perfringens toxins, either as native toxins or after formaldehyde inactivation, were evaluated as possible vaccine antigens. We determined whether antisera raised in calves against these toxins were able to protect against C. perfringens challenge in an intestinal loop model for bovine necrohemorrhagic enteritis.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha toxin; Bovine necrohemorrhagic enteritis; Clostridium perfringens; Neutralizing antibodies; Perfringolysin O
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27297520 PMCID: PMC4906594 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-016-0730-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Fig. 1Western blot analysis of the immune sera. a SDS-PAGE of the C. perfringens toxin preparation after Coomassie staining. b-d Representative Western blots showing the immunoreactivity towards crude C. perfringens supernatants (lane 1) and the C. perfringens toxin preparation (lane 2). The immune sera from calves vaccinated with native toxins (b) and formaldehyde inactivated, L-lysine protected C. perfringens toxins (c) detect only two proteins, whereas the commercial formaldehyde inactivated multivalent clostridial vaccine (d) reacts with multiple proteins. The blots shown are representative pictures of one out of three experiments
Calves were immunized with either a C. perfringens toxin preparation (native toxins), L-lysine protected, formaldehyde inactivated C. perfringens toxins (L-lysine/formaldehyde toxoid) or a commercial multivalent formaldehyde inactivated clostridial vaccine
| Vaccine | Anti-alpha toxin titer | Anti-perfringolysin O titer |
|---|---|---|
| Native toxins | 64.44 ± 0.22 | 25600 ± 0 |
| L-lysine/formaldehyde toxoid | 24.26 ± 2.96 | 16000 ± 9600 |
| Commercial formaldehyde vaccine | 45.14 ± 20.42 | 4800 ± 1600 |
The anti-alpha toxin and perfringolysin O response was measured by ELISA. The data represent antibody titers (mean ± standard error of the means), six weeks after initial immunization
Fig. 2Neutralization of the lesion-inducing potential of C. perfringens. The graph represents the percentage of ligated intestinal loops in which necrotic lesions were present after 5 h of incubation with sterile culture medium (n = 20), C. perfringens alone (untreated, n = 20) or C. perfringens in combination with naive sera (pre-immune serum, n = 60), antiserum to C. perfringens toxins (native toxins, n = 20), formaldehyde inactivated, L-lysine protected C. perfringens toxins (L-lysine/formaldehyde, n = 20) and commercial formaldehyde inactivated multivalent clostridial vaccine (commercial formaldehyde, n = 20). ** 0.001 ≤ p < 0.01 or *** p < 0.001
Fig. 3C. perfringens-induced necrosis in experimentally infected intestinal loops in calves. a Representative histological section from an intestinal loop without necrotic lesions. This loop was injected with C. perfringens in combination with antiserum to native C. perfringens toxins. b Representative section from an intestinal loop from the same calf, showing hemorrhage and extensive necrosis of the villi. This loops was injected with C. perfringens in combination with naïve immune serum
In vitro neutralization of biological activities of alpha toxin and perfringolysin O. Calves were immunized with either a C. perfringens toxin preparation (native toxins), L-lysine protected, formaldehyde inactivated C. perfringens toxins (L-lysine/formaldehyde toxoid) or a commercial multivalent formaldehyde inactivated clostridial vaccine
| Inhibitory capacity (Mean ± SEM) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Antiserum | Alpha toxin activitya | PFO activityb |
| Native toxins | 409.8 ± 5.75 | 48.0 ± 0.0 |
| L-lysine/formaldehyde toxoid | 80.47 ± 46.93 | 72.0 ± 24.0 |
| Commercial formaldehyde vaccine | 22.39 ± 2.17 | 18.0 ± 6.0 |
aNeutralization of 10 μg/ml alpha toxin. The inhibitory capacity of the antiserum is expressed as the dilution that gives 50 % inhibition of the alpha toxin activity
bNeutralization of 2 μg/ml perfringolysin O. The inhibitory capacity of the antiserum is expressed as the highest dilution that inhibited perfringolysin O-induced hemolysis
Alpha toxin activity was determined by measuring its lecithinase activity on egg yolk lipoproteins. Perfringolysin O (PFO) activity was determined by measuring the hemolysis of horse erythrocytes
In vitro neutralization of C. perfringens cytotoxicity. Calves were immunized with either a C. perfringens toxin preparation (native toxins), L-lysine protected, formaldehyde inactivated C. perfringens toxins (L-lysine/formaldehyde toxoid) or a commercial multivalent formaldehyde inactivated clostridial vaccine
| Antiserum | Inhibitory capacity (Mean ± SEM) |
|---|---|
| Native toxins | 32.00 ± 0.0 |
| L-lysine/formaldehyde toxoid | 9.00 ± 7.0 |
| Commercial formaldehyde vaccine | 4.00 ± 0.0 |
The cytotoxicity of C. perfringens supernatant to primary bovine endothelial cells was measured using a neutral red uptake (NRU) assay. The inhibitory capacity of the antiserum is expressed as the highest dilution that yields 80 % cell viability