| Literature DB >> 32188689 |
A S Asfor1, N Howe2, S Grazioli3, S Berryman2, K Parekh2, G Wilsden2, A Ludi2, D P King2, S Parida2, E Brocchi3, T J Tuthill2.
Abstract
Diagnostic tests for foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) include the detection of antibodies against either the viral nonstructural proteins or the capsid. The detection of antibodies against the structural proteins (SP) of the capsid can be used to monitor seroconversion in both infected and vaccinated animals. However, SP tests need to be tailored to the individual FMD virus (FMDV) serotype and their sensitivity may be affected by antigenic variability within each serotype and mismatching between test reagents. As a consequence, FMD reference laboratories are required to maintain multiple type-specific SP assays and reagents. A universal SP test would simplify frontline diagnostics and facilitate large-scale serological surveillance and postvaccination monitoring. In this study, a highly conserved region in the N terminus of FMDV capsid protein VP2 (VP2N) was characterized using a panel of intertype-reactive monoclonal antibodies. This revealed a universal epitope in VP2N which could be used as a peptide antigen to detect FMDV-specific antibodies against all types of the virus. A VP2-peptide enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (VP2-ELISA) was optimized using experimental and reference antisera from immunized, convalescent, and naïve animals (n = 172). The VP2-ELISA is universal and simple and provided sensitive (99%) and specific (93%) detection of antibodies to all FMDV strains used in this study. We anticipate that this SP test could have utility for serosurveillance during virus incursions in FMD-free countries and as an additional screening tool to assess FMD virus circulation in countries where the disease is endemic.Entities:
Keywords: ELISA; FMDV; conserved capsid; conserved capsid epitope; diagnosis; epitope; foot-and-mouth disease virus; serology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32188689 PMCID: PMC7269384 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.01527-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Microbiol ISSN: 0095-1137 Impact factor: 5.948
FIG 1FMDV heterotypic-reactive MAbs recognize the N terminus of VP2. (a) Overlapping peptides representing 45 VP2 N-terminal amino acids. “(K)6” denotes the addition of 6 lysine residues at the C terminus of the peptide to increase peptide solubility. (b) Peptide ELISA showing cross-reactive MAbs recognize peptides equivalent to the 15 (N15), 30 (N30), and 45 (N45) N-terminal amino acids of FMDV VP2. The 45 N-terminal amino acids of human rhinovirus VP4 (HRV-VP4) was used as a negative control; the concentration of peptides was 2 μg/ml. (c) MAb 4A3 epitope mapping (using peptides shown in panel a) identifies the cross-reactive epitope at the N terminus of VP2. (d) Reactivity of MAb 4A3 with capsid protein VP2 of all 7 serotypes in Western blotting. The 4A3 MAb produced a clearly intense band for VP2 and a weaker reaction for VP0. (e) Immunofluorescence microscopy using MAb 4A3 to detect FMDV serotype O-infected IBRS-2 cells.
FMDV MAbs showing cross-serotype reactivity and viral protein specificity
| MAb ID | Parent virus | Trapping ELISA | Western blotting VP target(s) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O | A | C | ASIA1 | SAT1 | SAT2 | SAT3 | |||
| 5B2 | A Malaysia 16/97 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | VP2 (+VP0) |
| 4A3 | C1 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | VP2 (±VP0) |
| 5F10 | Asia 1 Nepal 29/97 | + | + | + | + | +/− | + | + | VP2 (+VP0) |
| 4A10 | A24 Cruz | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | P1 |
| 5A4 | A24 Cruz | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | P1 |
| 4D1 | O UK 31/01 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | VP2 (+VP0) |
| 1D6 | O UK 31/01 | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | VP2 (+VP0) |
Symbols indicate positivity or negativity as follows: +, positive; −, negative; +/−, weakly positive. The data were generated from triplicate samples for each serotype. ID, identifier; VP, viral protein.
FIG 2Sera from animals infected with any serotype of FMDV reacted with VP2 peptides. (a) Reactivity of serum from an animal experimentally infected with FMDV serotype O with peptides equivalent to the N-terminal 15 (N15), 30 (N30) or 45 (N45) amino acids of FMDV VP2, or the 45 N-terminal amino acids of human rhinovirus VP4 (HRV-VP4, negative control). (b) Reactivity of sera from animals vaccinated with vaccine strains of the seven serotypes with the FMDV VP2N-45 peptide.
FIG 3Testing reference negative and positive serum samples to determine the specificity and sensitivity of the assay. (a) Reactivity in VP2 ELISA (OD at 490 nm) of negative (Neg; black squares, n = 100) and positive (circles represent infections [inf], triangles represent vaccinations [vac], serotypes are represented by colors as indicated; n = 72) reference sera. Peptide was used at 2 μg/ml, and sera were diluted 1 in 100. (b) Distribution plots comparing results of positive sera tested with VP2 ELISA (same as data in panel a; cutoff 0.4 OD) and with homologous (n = 37) and heterologous (n = 72) VNT (cutoff = log titer 1.65). Each sample was tested in triplicate, and at least two independent experiments were performed. (c) Distribution plots comparing results of positive sera tested with VP2 ELISA (same as data in panel a; cutoff 0.4 OD) with homologous (n = 30) and heterologous (n = 72) LPBE (cutoff = log titer 1.95). (d) Distribution plots comparing results of positive sera tested with VP2 ELISA (same as data in panel a; cutoff 0.4 OD), with SPCE (n = 30, cutoff = 40% of inhibition) and PrioCHECK ELISA kits (n = 29, cutoff = 50% of inhibition).
Comparative sensitivities of VP2 ELISA and other existing serological tests
| Test or sample status | Total no. of samples | No of positive samples | % sensitivity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VP2-ELISA | 72 | 71 | 99 | |
| VNT hetro | 72 | 52 | 72 | <0.0001 |
| VNT homo | 37 | 37 | 100 | 0.31 |
| LPBE-hetro | 72 | 67 | 93 | 0.092 |
| LPBE-homo | 30 | 30 | 100 | 0.31 |
| SPCE-homo | 72 | 70 | 97 | 0.55 |
| PrioCHECK | 29 | 27 | 93 | 0.26 |
| Status of samples | Positive | |||
Data represent results of a two-proportions test performed to compare the sensitivity of the assay to that of the VP2 ELISA.