Cargando…

Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial

Background: Beta-toxin (CPB) is the major virulence factor of Clostridium perfringens type C, causing hemorrhagic enteritis in newborn pigs but also other animals and humans. Vaccines containing inactivated CPB are known to induce protective antibody titers in sow colostrum and neutralization of the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Richard, Olivia K., Springer, Sven, Finzel, Jacqueline, Theuß, Tobias, Wyder, Marianne, Vidondo, Beatriz, Posthaus, Horst
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6520926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30991691
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins11040225
_version_ 1783418841508872192
author Richard, Olivia K.
Springer, Sven
Finzel, Jacqueline
Theuß, Tobias
Wyder, Marianne
Vidondo, Beatriz
Posthaus, Horst
author_facet Richard, Olivia K.
Springer, Sven
Finzel, Jacqueline
Theuß, Tobias
Wyder, Marianne
Vidondo, Beatriz
Posthaus, Horst
author_sort Richard, Olivia K.
collection PubMed
description Background: Beta-toxin (CPB) is the major virulence factor of Clostridium perfringens type C, causing hemorrhagic enteritis in newborn pigs but also other animals and humans. Vaccines containing inactivated CPB are known to induce protective antibody titers in sow colostrum and neutralization of the CPB activity is thought to be essential for protective immunity in newborn piglets. However, no method is available to quantify the neutralizing effect of vaccine-induced antibody titers in pigs. (2) Methods: We developed a novel assay for the quantification of neutralizing anti-CPB antibodies. Sera and colostrum of sows immunized with a commercial C. perfringens type A and C vaccine was used to determine neutralizing effects on CPB induced cytotoxicity in endothelial cells. Antibody titers of sows and their piglets were determined and compared to results obtained by an ELISA. (3) Results: Vaccinated sows developed neutralizing antibodies against CPB in serum and colostrum. Multiparous sows developed higher serum and colostrum antibody titers after booster vaccinations than uniparous sows. The antibody titers of sows and those of their piglets correlated highly. Piglets from vaccinated sows were protected against intraperitoneal challenge with C. perfringens type C supernatant. (4) Conclusions: The test based on primary porcine endothelial cells quantifies neutralizing antibody activity in serum and colostrum of vaccinated sows and could be used to reduce and refine animal experimentation during vaccine development.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6520926
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-65209262019-05-31 Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial Richard, Olivia K. Springer, Sven Finzel, Jacqueline Theuß, Tobias Wyder, Marianne Vidondo, Beatriz Posthaus, Horst Toxins (Basel) Article Background: Beta-toxin (CPB) is the major virulence factor of Clostridium perfringens type C, causing hemorrhagic enteritis in newborn pigs but also other animals and humans. Vaccines containing inactivated CPB are known to induce protective antibody titers in sow colostrum and neutralization of the CPB activity is thought to be essential for protective immunity in newborn piglets. However, no method is available to quantify the neutralizing effect of vaccine-induced antibody titers in pigs. (2) Methods: We developed a novel assay for the quantification of neutralizing anti-CPB antibodies. Sera and colostrum of sows immunized with a commercial C. perfringens type A and C vaccine was used to determine neutralizing effects on CPB induced cytotoxicity in endothelial cells. Antibody titers of sows and their piglets were determined and compared to results obtained by an ELISA. (3) Results: Vaccinated sows developed neutralizing antibodies against CPB in serum and colostrum. Multiparous sows developed higher serum and colostrum antibody titers after booster vaccinations than uniparous sows. The antibody titers of sows and those of their piglets correlated highly. Piglets from vaccinated sows were protected against intraperitoneal challenge with C. perfringens type C supernatant. (4) Conclusions: The test based on primary porcine endothelial cells quantifies neutralizing antibody activity in serum and colostrum of vaccinated sows and could be used to reduce and refine animal experimentation during vaccine development. MDPI 2019-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6520926/ /pubmed/30991691 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins11040225 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Richard, Olivia K.
Springer, Sven
Finzel, Jacqueline
Theuß, Tobias
Wyder, Marianne
Vidondo, Beatriz
Posthaus, Horst
Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial
title Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial
title_full Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial
title_fullStr Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial
title_full_unstemmed Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial
title_short Application of an Endothelial Cell Culture Assay for the Detection of Neutralizing Anti-Clostridium Perfringens Beta-Toxin Antibodies in a Porcine Vaccination Trial
title_sort application of an endothelial cell culture assay for the detection of neutralizing anti-clostridium perfringens beta-toxin antibodies in a porcine vaccination trial
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6520926/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30991691
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins11040225
work_keys_str_mv AT richardoliviak applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial
AT springersven applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial
AT finzeljacqueline applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial
AT theußtobias applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial
AT wydermarianne applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial
AT vidondobeatriz applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial
AT posthaushorst applicationofanendothelialcellcultureassayforthedetectionofneutralizinganticlostridiumperfringensbetatoxinantibodiesinaporcinevaccinationtrial