| Literature DB >> 35457172 |
Federico Fabris1, Petra Šoštarić2, Ivica Matak2, Thomas Binz3, Anna Toffan4, Morena Simonato5, Cesare Montecucco1,5, Marco Pirazzini1,6, Ornella Rossetto1,5,6.
Abstract
Tetanus and Botulinum type B neurotoxins are bacterial metalloproteases that specifically cleave the vesicle-associated membrane protein VAMP at an identical peptide bond, resulting in inhibition of neuroexocytosis. The minute amounts of these neurotoxins commonly used in experimental animals are not detectable, nor is detection of their VAMP substrate sensitive enough. The immune detection of the cleaved substrate is much more sensitive, as we have previously shown for botulinum neurotoxin type A. Here, we describe the production in rabbit of a polyclonal antibody raised versus a peptide encompassing the 13 residues C-terminal with respect to the neurotoxin cleavage site. The antibody was affinity purified and found to recognize, with high specificity and selectivity, the novel N-terminus of VAMP that becomes exposed after cleavage by tetanus toxin and botulinum toxin type B. This antibody recognizes the neoepitope not only in native and denatured VAMP but also in cultured neurons and in neurons in vivo in neurotoxin-treated mice or rats, suggesting the great potential of this novel tool to elucidate tetanus and botulinum B toxin activity in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: SNARE proteins; botulinum neurotoxins; polyclonal antibodies; tetanus neurotoxins; vesicle-associated membrane protein VAMP
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35457172 PMCID: PMC9024618 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23084355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Generation of the Ab-VAMP77 antibody. (A) Scheme showing the three SNARE proteins involved in neuroexocytosis that form the SNARE complex by coil-coiling their SNARE motifs, one from the vesicular VAMP-1/2 (blue), two from the membrane-anchored SNAP-25 (pink), and one from the integral membrane protein syntaxin-1A/1B (red). (B) Scheme showing the peptide bonds cleaved by the VAMP-specific CNT used in this study, which generate specific new N-termini to VAMP (shown is human VAMP-2). (C) Alignment of VAMP-1/2 showing that the FETSAAKLKRKYW peptide (pink) exposed by BoNT/B and TeNT is in all the main animal species used in research. The green residues indicate cleavage sites of TeNT and BoNT/B in VAMP-1 and VAMP-2. Red residues indicate the mutation responsible for VAMP-1 resistance to TeNT and BoNT/B in rat and chicken. (D) Scheme showing the generation of immunogenic carrier by chemical conjugation of the C-terminal Cysteine to the Keyhole limpet Hemocyanin. (E) the peptide-KLH complex was injected into a rabbit, and at the scheduled time point the blood was collected for the ensuing purification of peptide-specific IgGs.
Figure 2The Ab-VAMP77 polyclonal antibody detects VAMP-1/2 cleavage by TeNT and BoNT/B in neuronal culture with high efficiency and toxin selectivity. (A) Scheme showing the experimental readout used to evaluate the specificity of Ab-VAMP77 in rat CGNs. (B) Representative Western blotting showing the high sensitivity of Ab-VAMP77 compared to a conventional antibody at low TeNT (left) and BoNT/B (right) concentrations. The NC samples are control neurons not treated with any toxin. (C) Representative Western blotting showing that Ab-VAMP77 binds only to a cleaved fragment of VAMP specifically generated by BoNT/B and TeNT, but not by BoNT/D nor BoNT/G. (D) Control CGNs showing the typical punctuate pattern (inset) of VAMP-2 (green) staining at presynaptic level, and no signal for Ab-VAMP77 in the absence of TeNT or BoNT/B treatment. (E,F) Immunofluorescence analysis showing that at increasing concentration of TeNT (E) or BoNT/B (F) the signal of intact VAMP-2 (green) fades away, whereas the signal of Ab-VAMP77 (red) progressively increases yet maintains the typical punctuate pattern (insets) in both cases. Scale bars in (D–F) are 100 µm.
Figure 3The Ab-VAMP77 polyclonal antibody detects VAMP cleavage by BoNT/B at the neuromuscular junction. (A) Scheme showing the staining of the two LAL muscles collected after injection of either saline or BoNT/B (top panel) or of either BoNT/D or BoNT/G (bottom panel) and the following immunostaining of one LAL with an antibody against intact VAMP-1 (top panels) or with the Ab-VAMP77 antibody (bottom panels). In both cases, the muscles were also stained for the vesicular protein marker v-AchT. (B–E) Representative images of whole-mount LAL muscles injected with either saline (B) or BoNT/B (C) or BoNT/D (D) or BoNT/G (E) stained for intact VAMP-1 (red in top panels) or cleaved VAMP (red in bottom panels). The right panels of each condition show the merge with v-AchT (green). Scale bar = 25 μm.
Figure 4The Ab-VAMP77 polyclonal antibody detects VAMP cleavage by TeNT in the brain stem. The TeNT was injected either at the level of the LAL in the mouse (A) or at the level of the whisker pad in rats (B) and then the cleavage of VAMP was evaluated in the brain stem with an antibody against intact VAMP-2 (green) and Ab-VAMP77 (red). The bottom panels in (A,B) show a magnification of the white-squared area. Scale bar = 40 μm.