| Literature DB >> 29736150 |
Ismail Koyuncu1, Abdurrahman Kocyigit2, Ahmet Ozer3, Sahabettin Selek2, Adnan Kirmit1, Hasan Karsen4.
Abstract
Serologic tests for brucellosis aim to detect antibodies produced against membranous lipopolysaccharide of bacteria. Diagnostic use of this method is limited due to false positiveness. This study evaluates an alternative antigen to lipopolysaccharides (LPS), outer membrane 28-precursor-protein, of Brucella melitensis Rev1 for its diagnostic value. Omp28 precursor of B. melitensis Rev1 was cloned, expressed, and purified. 6-His and sumo epitope tags were used to tag the protein at N-termini. Omp28 gene was amplified based on the ORF sequence and cloned into a pETSUMO vector. The recombinant construct was propagated in Escherichia coli One Shot® Mach1™ cells then transformed into E. coli BL21(D3) cells for protein expression. The purified protein was studied in an indirect ELISA for diagnosis of brucellosis. Sera samples from 60 patients were screened by ELISA and the results were compared to Rose Bengal plate test. Recombinant antigen-based iELISA has given a successful outcome with the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of 87.8%, 96.2%, 96.6%, and 78.78%, respectively. In conclusion, recombinant production and purification of the immunodominant Omp28 precursor protein has been achieved successfully in a one-step process with efficient yield and can be used for diagnosis of brucellosis in humans.Entities:
Keywords: ELISA; Omp28; SUMO fusion; brucellosis; purification; recombinant Rev1
Year: 2018 PMID: 29736150 PMCID: PMC5927177 DOI: 10.5114/ceji.2018.74877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cent Eur J Immunol ISSN: 1426-3912 Impact factor: 2.085
Fig. 1Amplification, cloning, and confirmation of the OMP28 precursor gene. A) Confirmation of the cloning of B) melitensis Rev1 OMP28 precursor gene into pETSUMO expression vector. M: DNA size marker, (lanes 1–3); OMP28 precursor gene. B) Expression of His-SUMO-OMP28 precursor fusion protein by using 1 M IPTG at different hours (lane 1); baseline/hour zero (lane 2–4); 6th–7th hours IPTG (–). M: marker (lane 5); hour zero (lane 6); 1st hour, (lane 7–9); 6th–8th hours IPTG (+). C) SDS-PAGE analysis of the protein extracts made with denatured and native methods (lane 1–2); supernatant obtained by native lysis (lane 3–4); total cell lysates, obtained with the native lysis. M: marker (lane 5); total cell lysate obtained by denatured lysis (lane 6); the pellet of lysis obtained with the native, applying denaturing lysis. D) SDS-PAGE analysis of protein purification step by Ni-NTA affinity column (lane 1–2); total cell lysate (lane 3); binding fraction (lane 4–6); washing fraction (lane 7–8); elution fraction
Fig. 2Western blot analysis of the recombinant His- SUMO-OMP28 precursor protein. M: marker. Western blot analysis of the whole cell lysate of non-purification (lane 1), and protein elution fraction (lane 2–3) by mouse monoclonal anti-His-tag antibody. The single band shows the expression of His-SUMO-OMP28 precursor protein
Fig. 3SDS-PAGE analysis of cutting and purification steps of His-SUMO-OMP28 precursor protein by sumo protease. M: marker (lane 1); purified His-SUMOOMP28 precursor protein (lane 2); the products generated by cutting of His-sumo-OMP28 recombinant protein with SUMO protease; the top band represents uncut recombinant His-Sumo-OMP28 fusion protein at around 40 kDa, the middle one is OMP28 precursor protein at around 25 kDa, and the bottom band represents His-SUMO protein (lane 3); native OMP28 precursor protein attained after Ni-NTA affinity column application of SUMOprotease- treated protein product
Reliability comparison: new iELISA and RBAT
| OMP28 precursor iELISA | Rose Bengal agglutination test | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Brucellosis (+) | Brucellosis (–) | Total | |
| Brucellosis (+) | 29 | 1 | 30 |
| Brucellosis (–) | 4 | 26 | 30 |
| Total | 33 | 27 | 60 |