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Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA

There is now an overwhelming body of evidence that implicates bats in the dissemination of a long list of emerging and re-emerging viral agents, often causing illnesses or death in both animals and humans. Despite this, there is a paucity of information regarding the immunological mechanisms by whic...

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Autores principales: Wynne, James W., Di Rubbo, Antonio, Shiell, Brian J., Beddome, Gary, Cowled, Christopher, Peck, Grantley R., Huang, Jing, Grimley, Samantha L., Baker, Michelle L., Michalski, Wojtek P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3538733/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23308125
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052930
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author Wynne, James W.
Di Rubbo, Antonio
Shiell, Brian J.
Beddome, Gary
Cowled, Christopher
Peck, Grantley R.
Huang, Jing
Grimley, Samantha L.
Baker, Michelle L.
Michalski, Wojtek P.
author_facet Wynne, James W.
Di Rubbo, Antonio
Shiell, Brian J.
Beddome, Gary
Cowled, Christopher
Peck, Grantley R.
Huang, Jing
Grimley, Samantha L.
Baker, Michelle L.
Michalski, Wojtek P.
author_sort Wynne, James W.
collection PubMed
description There is now an overwhelming body of evidence that implicates bats in the dissemination of a long list of emerging and re-emerging viral agents, often causing illnesses or death in both animals and humans. Despite this, there is a paucity of information regarding the immunological mechanisms by which bats coexist with highly pathogenic viruses. Immunoglobulins are major components of the adaptive immune system. Early studies found bats may have quantitatively lower antibody responses to model antigens compared to conventional laboratory animals. To further understand the antibody response of bats, the present study purified and characterised the major immunoglobulin classes from healthy black flying foxes, Pteropus alecto. We employed a novel strategy, where IgG was initially purified and used to generate anti-Fab specific antibodies. Immobilised anti-Fab specific antibodies were then used to capture other immunoglobulins from IgG depleted serum. While high quantities of IgM were successfully isolated from serum, IgA was not. Only trace quantities of IgA were detected in the serum by mass spectrometry. Immobilised ligands specific to IgA (Jacalin, Peptide M and staphylococcal superantigen-like protein) also failed to capture P. alecto IgA from serum. IgM was the second most abundant serum antibody after IgG. A survey of mucosal secretions found IgG was the dominant antibody class rather than IgA. Our study demonstrates healthy P. alecto bats have markedly less serum IgA than expected. Higher quantities of IgG in mucosal secretions may be compensation for this low abundance or lack of IgA. Knowledge and reagents developed within this study can be used in the future to examine class-specific antibody response within this important viral host.
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spelling pubmed-35387332013-01-10 Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA Wynne, James W. Di Rubbo, Antonio Shiell, Brian J. Beddome, Gary Cowled, Christopher Peck, Grantley R. Huang, Jing Grimley, Samantha L. Baker, Michelle L. Michalski, Wojtek P. PLoS One Research Article There is now an overwhelming body of evidence that implicates bats in the dissemination of a long list of emerging and re-emerging viral agents, often causing illnesses or death in both animals and humans. Despite this, there is a paucity of information regarding the immunological mechanisms by which bats coexist with highly pathogenic viruses. Immunoglobulins are major components of the adaptive immune system. Early studies found bats may have quantitatively lower antibody responses to model antigens compared to conventional laboratory animals. To further understand the antibody response of bats, the present study purified and characterised the major immunoglobulin classes from healthy black flying foxes, Pteropus alecto. We employed a novel strategy, where IgG was initially purified and used to generate anti-Fab specific antibodies. Immobilised anti-Fab specific antibodies were then used to capture other immunoglobulins from IgG depleted serum. While high quantities of IgM were successfully isolated from serum, IgA was not. Only trace quantities of IgA were detected in the serum by mass spectrometry. Immobilised ligands specific to IgA (Jacalin, Peptide M and staphylococcal superantigen-like protein) also failed to capture P. alecto IgA from serum. IgM was the second most abundant serum antibody after IgG. A survey of mucosal secretions found IgG was the dominant antibody class rather than IgA. Our study demonstrates healthy P. alecto bats have markedly less serum IgA than expected. Higher quantities of IgG in mucosal secretions may be compensation for this low abundance or lack of IgA. Knowledge and reagents developed within this study can be used in the future to examine class-specific antibody response within this important viral host. Public Library of Science 2013-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3538733/ /pubmed/23308125 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052930 Text en © 2013 Wynne et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wynne, James W.
Di Rubbo, Antonio
Shiell, Brian J.
Beddome, Gary
Cowled, Christopher
Peck, Grantley R.
Huang, Jing
Grimley, Samantha L.
Baker, Michelle L.
Michalski, Wojtek P.
Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA
title Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA
title_full Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA
title_fullStr Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA
title_full_unstemmed Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA
title_short Purification and Characterisation of Immunoglobulins from the Australian Black Flying Fox (Pteropus alecto) Using Anti-Fab Affinity Chromatography Reveals the Low Abundance of IgA
title_sort purification and characterisation of immunoglobulins from the australian black flying fox (pteropus alecto) using anti-fab affinity chromatography reveals the low abundance of iga
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3538733/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23308125
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052930
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