| Literature DB >> 28660200 |
Christine N Vuong1, Wen-Ko Chou2, Vivek A Kuttappan3, Billy M Hargis3, Lisa R Bielke4, Luc R Berghman1,2.
Abstract
In vivo targeting of peptides to antigen-presenting cells by use of agonistic anti-CD40 monoclonal antibodies has been used successfully as an immune response enhancing strategy. When tested in chickens, the antibody-guided platform was capable of inducing specific IgG production within 1 week postimmunization. However, use of this method beyond its initial conception as a vaccine delivery tool has not been fully exploited. In this study, Clostridium perfringens alpha-toxin was used as a model microbial toxin for epitope mapping by using the antibody-guided immunization method to generate a panel of antibodies against specific, regions of the toxin in an attempt to identify crucial determinants on the toxin which, once bound, would hinder downstream toxicity. Alpha-toxin, which possesses both hemolytic and phospholipase C (PLC) enzymatic activities, has long been known to be one of the key destructive etiological agents of necrotic enteritis disease in poultry. Previous attempts to identify crucial antigenic determinants on the toxin mediating its enzymatic activities have been performed using expensive and labor-intensive site-directed mutagenesis techniques. To create a panel of antibodies, 23 short candidate alpha-toxin peptide regions were selected in silico using B-cell epitope prediction algorithms in the public domain and were custom synthesized to load onto the antibody-guided complex for immunization in birds for antisera production. Peptide-specific antibody responses were generated against all candidate neutralizing epitopes and used for in vitro toxin neutralization tests. Antisera against all 23 peptides were able to neutralize the toxin's hemolytic activity, with neutralization titers ranging from 80 to 320, but none were effective in blocking PLC. The novel approach of antibody-guided immunization introduces a new, inexpensive method for polyclonal IgG production and de facto identification of neutralizing epitopes in microbial toxins and enzymes within 2 weeks from in silico analysis of a putative target sequence.Entities:
Keywords: CD40; Clostridium perfringens; alpha-toxin; antibody production; antibody-guided; epitope mapping; poultry
Year: 2017 PMID: 28660200 PMCID: PMC5468450 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2017.00091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Clostridium perfringens alpha-toxin-derived synthetic peptides.
| Peptide # | Length | Sequence | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 31 | 9 | GKIDGTGTH |
| 2 | 51 | 15 | ENDLSKNEPESVRKN |
| 3 | 71 | 20 | ENMHELQLGSTYPDYDKNAY |
| 4 | 81 | 20 | TYPDYDKNAYDLYQDHFWDP |
| 5 | 91 | 20 | DLYQDHFWDPDTDNNFSKDN |
| 6 | 117 | 10 | IPDTGESQIR |
| 7 | 136 | 10 | EWQRGNYKQA |
| 8 | 158 | 23 | DIDTPYHPANVTAVDSAGHVKFE |
| 9 | 170 | 20 | VDSAGHVKFETFAEERKEQY |
| 10 | 181 | 20 | TFAEERKEQYKINTAGCKTN |
| 11 | 191 | 21 | KINTVGCKTNEDFYADILKNK |
| 12 | 200 | 20 | EDFYADILKNKDFNAWSKEY |
| 13 | 210 | 20 | KDFNAWSKEYARGFAKTGKS |
| 14 | 220 | 17 | ARGFAKTGKSIYYSHAS |
| 15 | 233 | 17 | SHASMSHSWDDWDYAAK |
| 16 | 240 | 20 | SWDDWDYAAKVTLANSQKGT |
| 17 | 270 | 16 | DVSEGNDPSVGNNVKE |
| 18 | 291 | 12 | STSGEKDAGTDD |
| 19 | 309 | 13 | KTKDGKTQEWEMD |
| 20 | 320 | 21 | DNPGNDFMAGSKDTYTFKLKD |
| 21 | 330 | 20 | SKDTYTFKLKDENLKIDDIQ |
| 22 | 354 | 16 | RKRKYTAFPDAYKPEN |
| 23 | 379 | 19 | VVDKDINEWISGNSTYNIK |
Design based on Cpa GenBank Accession: CAA35186.1 amino acid sequence.
Figure 1Schematic of 23 peptides generated based on the Clostridium perfringens alpha-toxin amino acid sequence (CAA35186.1). Linear peptides were selected based on the ease of synthesis using Immune Epitope Database and Analysis Resource publically available B-cell epitope prediction algorithms (figure not to scale) (17).
Figure 2Peptide-specific IgG responses. Individual peptide-specific antibody titers reported as Day 7:Day 1 ratio based on ELISA measurements against the matching peptide used for immunization. Groups 13C and 14C were immunized with non-targeting complexes loaded with either peptide #13 or #14 and served as non-targeting negative controls. Group means and SE overlaid.
Figure 3Mean hemolytic neutralization titers. Hemolytic neutralization titers reported as the inverse of the highest serum dilution factor capable of completely neutralizing the hemolytic activity of Clostridium perfringens alpha-toxin. Hyperimmune serum against alpha-toxin obtained from USDA APHIS was used as positive control serum and the corresponding group was labeled as “+” on chart.
Figure 4Mean phospholipase C (PLC) neutralization titers. PLC neutralization titers reported as the inverse of the highest serum dilution factor capable of completely neutralizing the PLC activity of Clostridium perfringens alpha-toxin. Hyperimmune serum against alpha-toxin obtained from USDA APHIS was used as positive control serum and the corresponding group was labeled as “+” on chart.