| Literature DB >> 32703299 |
Beatriz Aragón-Aranda1, María Jesús de Miguel2,3, Leticia Lázaro-Antón1, Miriam Salvador-Bescós1, Amaia Zúñiga-Ripa1, Ignacio Moriyón1, Maite Iriarte1, Pilar M Muñoz4,5, Raquel Conde-Álvarez6.
Abstract
Brucella is a genus of gram-negative bacteria that cause brucellosis. B. abortus and B. melitensis infect domestic ruminants while B. suis (biovars 1-3) infect swine, and all these bacteria but B. suis biovar 2 are zoonotic. Live attenuated B. abortus S19 and B. melitensis Rev1 are effective vaccines in domestic ruminants, though both can infect humans. However, there is no swine brucellosis vaccine. Here, we investigated the potential use as vaccines of B. suis biovar 2 rough (R) lipopolysaccharide (LPS) mutants totally lacking O-chain (Bs2ΔwbkF) or only producing internal O-chain precursors (Bs2Δwzm) and mutants with a smooth (S) LPS defective in the core lateral branch (Bs2ΔwadB and Bs2ΔwadD). We also investigated mutants in the pyruvate phosphate dikinase (Bs2ΔppdK) and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (Bs2ΔpckA) genes encoding enzymes bridging phosphoenolpyruvate and the tricarboxylic acid cycle. When tested in the OIE mouse model at the recommended R or S vaccine doses (108 and 105 CFU, respectively), CFU/spleen of all LPS mutants were reduced with respect to the wild type and decreased faster for the R than for the S mutants. At those doses, protection against B. suis was similar for Bs2ΔwbkF, Bs2Δwzm, Bs2ΔwadB and the Rev1 control (105 CFU). As described before for B. abortus, B. suis biovar 2 carried a disabled pckA so that a double mutant Bs2ΔppdKΔpckA had the same metabolic phenotype as Bs2ΔppdK and ppdK mutation was enough to generate attenuation. At 105 CFU, Bs2ΔppdK also conferred the same protection as Rev1. As compared to other B. suis vaccine candidates described before, the mutants described here simultaneously carry irreversible deletions easy to identify as vaccine markers, lack antibiotic-resistance markers and were obtained in a non-zoonotic background. Since R vaccines should not elicit antibodies to the S-LPS and wzm mutants carry immunogenic O-chain precursors and did not improve Bs2ΔwbkF, the latter seems a better R vaccine candidate than Bs2Δwzm. However, taking into account that all R vaccines interfere in ELISA and other widely used assays, whether Bs2ΔwbkF is advantageous over Bs2ΔwadB or Bs2ΔppdK requires experiments in the natural host.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32703299 PMCID: PMC7376850 DOI: 10.1186/s13567-020-00815-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1Pathways and key enzymes targeted for the development ofvaccines. Schematic representation of Brucella (A) LPS biosynthesis steps that occur at both sides of the inner membrane (IM), B LPS core, and C central carbon metabolism. The proteins corresponding to the mutants investigated are indicated with arrows. WbkF, bactoprenol (BctPP, Bactoprenol-P-P) primase for O-chain polymerization; Wzm/Wzt, O-chain translocation ABC transport system; WadA, core glycosyltransferase that incorporates the terminal glucose (Glc) linking the core to the two O-chain mannoses (Man) of the proximal section of the N-formyl-perosamine (NF-per) polysaccharide; Pgm, phosphoglucomutase necessary for the synthesis of the UPD-glucose used by WadA; WadB, WadC and WadD, glycosyltransferases involved in the incorporation of glucosamine (GlcN) and Man to the core-lateral branch; Kdo, 3-deoxy-d-manno-octulosonic acid; Quin, quinovosamine. WboA, WboB, WbkA and WbkE, O-chain glycosyltransferases. F1,6bP, fructose-1,6-bisphosphate; DHAP, dihydroxyacetone-phosphate; GAP, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate; PEP, phosphoenolpyruvate; PYR, pyruvate; AcCoA, acetyl-CoA; PckA, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase; PpdK, pyruvate phosphate dikinase; EDP, Entner–Doudoroff pathway; PPP, pentose phosphate pathway; TCA, tricarboxylic acid cycle; GC, glyoxylate bypass. Asterisks mark substrates in the mGSM. The functionality of pathways represented as discontinuous lines varies depending on the Brucella species and biovar [17, 29–34, 56].
Genes studied in the present work.
| Gene | Coding for | LPS phenotype | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glycosyltransferase involved in the synthesis of | S-LPS with core defect | [ | ||
| Glycosyltransferase involved in the synthesis of | S-LPS with core defect | [ | ||
| Undecaprenyl-glycosyltransferase priming bactoprenol for O-chain polymerization | R-LPS with complete core | [ | ||
| Permease of the ABC system translocating the O-chain to the periplasm | R-LPS with complete core | Build up cytoplasmic O-chain on the inner membrane. | [ | |
| Pyruvate phosphate dikinase (PEP ↔ pyruvate) | S-LPS | Required for growth on gluconeogenic media | [ | |
| Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (oxaloacetate → PEP) | S-LPS | Inactive in | [ |
Figure 2LPS defects generated inbv2 by mutation of, , and. A Western blot analysis of SDS-proteinase K extracts with an anti-S Brucella serum (rabbit infected with B. melitensis 16M). B SDS-PAGE and silver staining of SDS-proteinase K extracts. C Western blot analysis of SDS-proteinase K extracts with monoclonal anti-core antibody A68-24G12/A08.
Figure 3Deletion ofabolishes growth ofbv2 in gluconeogenic (mGSM) but not in non-gluconeogenic (TSB) media. Each point represents the mean ± standard error (error bars are within the size of symbols) values of technical triplicates. The experiment was repeated three times with similar results.
Figure 4bv2 presents a SNP leading to a premature stop in. The sites where premature stop codons occur are indicated with a vertical arrow. The SNP leading to premature stop in Bs2WT is indicated as D (for deletion). The functional pckA of B. microti and B. suis biovar 5, and the mutated pckA of B. abortus described previously are included as reference. In all brucellae, pckA is located upstream of the regulatory gene bvrR. In Brucella presenting an intact pckA, yaeJ (coding a ribosome-associated protein) is located immediately downstream of pckA, whereas in the sequenced Brucella presenting a mutated pckA a ORF (i.e.: a truncated PckA in B. abortus or a pseudogene in B. suis bv2 Thomsen) upstream of yaeJ is annotated (stripped arrows).
Figure 5vaccine candidates display different profiles of multiplication in mouse spleen. Multiplication profile of A LPS mutants, BppdK metabolic mutant and C combined mutants. CFUs in spleen of infected BALB/c mice were counted after SC inoculation with 105 CFU/mouse of Bs2ΔppdK, Bs2ΔwadB, Bs2ΔwadD, Bs2ΔppdKΔwadB Bs2ΔppdKΔwadD, or 108 CFU/mouse of Bs2ΔwbkF and Bs2Δwzm.
Protection against virulentinduced by LPS and metabolic mutants inoculated subcutaneously.
| Vaccine | Dose (CFU/mouse) | Mean ± SD of log10 CFU in spleen of | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bs2WT | Vaccine | ||
| Bs2Δ | 105 | 3.97 ± 0.37a,b | 2.61 ± 0.97 |
| Bs2Δ | 105 | 3.65 ± 0.43a,b | 2.39 ± 0.54 |
| Bs2Δ | 105 | 4.12 ± 1.09a,b | 2.68 ± 1.17 |
| Bs2Δ | 108 | 3.33 ± 0.36a,b | 2.45 ± 0.56 |
| Bs2Δ | 108 | 2.83 ± 1.88a,b | 2.52 ± 1.50 |
| Rev1 | 105 | 3.68 ± 0.78a | 2.43 ± 0.56 |
| BSS | – | 6.69 ± 0.13 | |
Statistical comparison (n = 5) of mean log10 Bs2WT CFU/spleen: ap < 0.001 vs. BSS (unvaccinated) and bp > 0.05 vs. Rev1.