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Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis

Babesia bovis is a tick-borne intraerythocytic protozoan responsible for acute disease in cattle which can be controlled by vaccination with attenuated B. bovis strains. Emerging B. bovis transfection technologies may increase the usefulness of these live vaccines. One use of transfected B. bovis pa...

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Autores principales: Laughery, Jacob M., Knowles, Donald P., Schneider, David A., Bastos, Reginaldo G., McElwain, Terry F., Suarez, Carlos E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4026526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24840336
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097890
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author Laughery, Jacob M.
Knowles, Donald P.
Schneider, David A.
Bastos, Reginaldo G.
McElwain, Terry F.
Suarez, Carlos E.
author_facet Laughery, Jacob M.
Knowles, Donald P.
Schneider, David A.
Bastos, Reginaldo G.
McElwain, Terry F.
Suarez, Carlos E.
author_sort Laughery, Jacob M.
collection PubMed
description Babesia bovis is a tick-borne intraerythocytic protozoan responsible for acute disease in cattle which can be controlled by vaccination with attenuated B. bovis strains. Emerging B. bovis transfection technologies may increase the usefulness of these live vaccines. One use of transfected B. bovis parasites may be as a vaccine delivery platform. Previous transfection methods for B. bovis were limited by single expression sites and intracellular expression of transfected antigens. This study describes a novel transfection system in which two exogenous genes are expressed: one for selection and the other for a selected antigen designed to be delivered to the surface of the parasites. The strategy for duplicating the number of transfected genes was based on the use of the putative bidirectional promoter of the B. bovis 1.4 Kb ef-1α intergenic region. The ability of this region to regulate two independent expression sites was demonstrated using a luciferase assay on transiently transfected B. bovis parasites and then incorporated into a stable transfection plasmid to control independent expression of the selectable marker GFP-BSD and another gene of interest. A chimeric gene was synthetized using sequences from the protective B-cell epitopes of Rhipicephalus microplus tick antigen Bm86 along with sequences from the surface exposed B. bovis major surface antigen-1. This chimeric gene was then cloned into the additional expression site of the transfection plasmid. Transfection of the B. bovis Mo7 strain with this plasmid resulted in stable insertion into the ef-1α locus and simultaneous expression of both exogenous genes. Expression of the Bm86 epitopes on the surface of transfected merozoites was demonstrated using immunofluorescence analyses. The ability to independently express multiple genes by the inclusion of a bidirectional promoter and the achievement of surface expression of foreign epitopes advances the potential of transfected B. bovis as a future vaccine delivery platform.
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spelling pubmed-40265262014-05-21 Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis Laughery, Jacob M. Knowles, Donald P. Schneider, David A. Bastos, Reginaldo G. McElwain, Terry F. Suarez, Carlos E. PLoS One Research Article Babesia bovis is a tick-borne intraerythocytic protozoan responsible for acute disease in cattle which can be controlled by vaccination with attenuated B. bovis strains. Emerging B. bovis transfection technologies may increase the usefulness of these live vaccines. One use of transfected B. bovis parasites may be as a vaccine delivery platform. Previous transfection methods for B. bovis were limited by single expression sites and intracellular expression of transfected antigens. This study describes a novel transfection system in which two exogenous genes are expressed: one for selection and the other for a selected antigen designed to be delivered to the surface of the parasites. The strategy for duplicating the number of transfected genes was based on the use of the putative bidirectional promoter of the B. bovis 1.4 Kb ef-1α intergenic region. The ability of this region to regulate two independent expression sites was demonstrated using a luciferase assay on transiently transfected B. bovis parasites and then incorporated into a stable transfection plasmid to control independent expression of the selectable marker GFP-BSD and another gene of interest. A chimeric gene was synthetized using sequences from the protective B-cell epitopes of Rhipicephalus microplus tick antigen Bm86 along with sequences from the surface exposed B. bovis major surface antigen-1. This chimeric gene was then cloned into the additional expression site of the transfection plasmid. Transfection of the B. bovis Mo7 strain with this plasmid resulted in stable insertion into the ef-1α locus and simultaneous expression of both exogenous genes. Expression of the Bm86 epitopes on the surface of transfected merozoites was demonstrated using immunofluorescence analyses. The ability to independently express multiple genes by the inclusion of a bidirectional promoter and the achievement of surface expression of foreign epitopes advances the potential of transfected B. bovis as a future vaccine delivery platform. Public Library of Science 2014-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4026526/ /pubmed/24840336 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097890 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Laughery, Jacob M.
Knowles, Donald P.
Schneider, David A.
Bastos, Reginaldo G.
McElwain, Terry F.
Suarez, Carlos E.
Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis
title Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis
title_full Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis
title_fullStr Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis
title_full_unstemmed Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis
title_short Targeted Surface Expression of an Exogenous Antigen in Stably Transfected Babesia bovis
title_sort targeted surface expression of an exogenous antigen in stably transfected babesia bovis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4026526/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24840336
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0097890
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