| Literature DB >> 28652930 |
Lorena Vázquez-Iglesias1, Borja Estefanell-Ucha1, Leticia Barcia-Castro1, María Páez de la Cadena1, Paula Álvarez-Chaver2, Daniel Ayude-Vázquez1, Francisco Javier Rodríguez-Berrocal1.
Abstract
Clostridium septicum produces a number of diseases in human and farm animals which, in most of the cases, are fatal without clinical intervention. Alpha toxin is an important agent and the unique lethal virulent factor produced by Clostridium septicum. This toxin is haemolytic, highly lethal and necrotizing activities but is being used as an antigen to develop animal vaccines. The aim of this study was to isolate the alpha toxin of Clostridium septicum and produce highly specific antibodies against it. In this work, we have developed a simple and efficient method for alpha toxin purification, based on electroelution that can be used as a time-saving method for purifying proteins. This technique avoids contamination by other proteins that could appear during other protein purification techniques such chromatography. The highly purified toxin was used to produce polyclonal antibodies. The specificity of the antibodies was tested by western blot and these antibodies can be applied to the quantitative determination of alpha toxin by slot blot.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha-toxin; Antibodies; Clostridium septicum; Electroelution; Slot blot
Year: 2017 PMID: 28652930 PMCID: PMC5483040 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3407
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Protein profile of Clostridium septicum extracellular medium.
(A) SDS-PAGE analysis by Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 stained. (B) Non-denaturing Native-PAGE analysis by Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 stained. Protein bands 1–17 were cut and analyzed by MS/MS. kDa indicates migration of the protein markers.
List of protein identified by MALDI-TOF/TOF or HPLC-nESI-FTICR in Clostridium septicum extracellular medium.
| Band | M | MS method | Protein name | SwissProt/NCBInr accession number | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1, 17 | >200 | MALDI | Alpha toxin |
| Pathogenesis |
| 2 | 165.3 | ESI | Hypothetical protein CPE1875 |
| – |
| 3 | 128.8 | ESI | Pyruvate-flavodoxin oxidoreductase |
| Oxidoreduction |
| 4 | 111.1 | MALDI/ESI | Collagenase |
| Digestion of collagen |
| 5 | 83.3 | ESI | Formate acetyltransferase |
| Glucose metabolic process |
| 6 | 83.3 | ESI | Formate acetyltransferase |
| Glucose metabolic process |
| 7 | 60 | ESI | 60 kDa chaperonin |
| Chaperone |
| 8 | 56.7 | MALDI/ESI | 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate-independent phosphoglycerate mutase |
| Catalyzes interconversion of 2-phosphoglycerate and 3-phosphoglycerate |
| 9 | 60.3 | ESI | Formate-tetrahydrofolate ligase |
| Tetrahydrofolate interconversion |
| 10 | 49.7 | MALDI/ESI | Alpha toxin |
| Pathogenesis; Carbohydrate degradation & glycolysis |
| 11 | 49.9 | MALDI/ESI | Alpha toxin |
| Pathogenesis |
| 42.0 | Flagellin protein FliA(S) |
| Ciliary or flagellar motility | ||
| 41.0 | Thiolase |
| Acyltransferase | ||
| 12 | 35.5 | ESI | Hypothetical protein CPE1232 |
| – |
| 38.1 | UDP-4-dehydro-6-deoxy-2-acetamido- D-glucose 4-reductase |
| Lyase and oxidoreductase activities; | ||
| 42.0 | Flagellin protein FliA(S) |
| Ciliary or flagellar motility; | ||
| 41.0 | Thiolase |
| Acyltransferase | ||
| 13 | 30.5 | MALDI/ESI | 3-hydroxybutyryl-coA dehydrogenase |
| Oxidoreductase |
| 14 | 30.5 | ESI | 3-hydroxybutyryl-coA dehydrogenase |
| Oxidoreductase |
| 15 | 25.1 | ESI | Hypothetical protein CPE1233 |
| – |
| 30.4 | Fructose-bisphosphate aldolase |
| Glycolysis | ||
| 16 | MALDI/ESI | Triosephosphate isomerase |
| Isomerase | |
| Hypothetical protein CPE1233 |
| – |
Notes.
Band number as stated in Fig. 1.
Theoretical molecular mass (kDa) taken from the UniProtkB entry.
Type of ionization used for mass spectrometry.
Figure 2Western blot analysis of the Clostridium septicum extracellular medium using our anti-Clostridium septicum alpha toxin and the Clostridium septicum (Gas-Gangrene) antitoxin (NIBSC code: VI).
(A) SDS-PAGE and western blot analysis using anti-C. septicum alpha toxin. (B) Native-PAGE and western blot analysis using anti-C. septicum alpha toxin. (C) SDS-PAGE and western blot analysis using the C. septicum (Gas-Gangrene) antitoxin (NIBSC code: VI). kDa indicates migration of the protein markers. The arrows indicate alpha toxin. A total of 3 μg of total protein per lane were loaded.
Figure 3Analysis of the specificity of the anti-Clostridium septicum alpha toxin by western blotting with other Clostridium spp.
Lane 1 extracellular medium of C. septicum Lane 2 extracellular medium of C. perfringens type D, Lane 3 extracellular medium of C. haemolyticum, Lane 4 extracellular medium of C. tetani and Lane 5 extracellular medium of C. sordellii. Lane M indicates migration of protein molecular weight markers (kDa). The arrows indicate alpha toxin. A total of 3 μg of total protein per lane were loaded.
Figure 4Slot blot analysis for the quantification of different concentrations of purified alpha toxin.
(A) Several concentrations of purified alpha toxin were analyzed using the protocol detail in ‘Material and Methods’. The culture medium and PBS serve as a negative control. (B) This figure shows the linear relationship between optical density and protein concentration gave a correlation coefficient of 0.9931. (C) The logarithm concentration of the alpha toxin was plotted on x axis and the O.D. values were plotted in y axis. The 4-parameter logistic (4PL) model was used for the calibration curve. A very good fitting, R2 = 0.995, was demonstrated.