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Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin

Botulism is a paralytic disease caused by botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs). Equine antitoxin is currently the standard therapy for botulism in human. The preparation of equine antitoxin relies on the immunization of horses with botulinum toxoid, which suffers from low yield and safety limitations. The...

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Autores principales: Ben David, Alon, Barnea, Ada, Torgeman, Amram, Diamant, Eran, Dor, Eyal, Schwartz, Arieh, Rosen, Osnat, Caspi, Noa, Saraf, Miki, Lerer, Elad, Adar, Yaakov, Lupo, Edith, Toister, Einat, Zichel, Ran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9506527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36146601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10091522
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author Ben David, Alon
Barnea, Ada
Torgeman, Amram
Diamant, Eran
Dor, Eyal
Schwartz, Arieh
Rosen, Osnat
Caspi, Noa
Saraf, Miki
Lerer, Elad
Adar, Yaakov
Lupo, Edith
Toister, Einat
Zichel, Ran
author_facet Ben David, Alon
Barnea, Ada
Torgeman, Amram
Diamant, Eran
Dor, Eyal
Schwartz, Arieh
Rosen, Osnat
Caspi, Noa
Saraf, Miki
Lerer, Elad
Adar, Yaakov
Lupo, Edith
Toister, Einat
Zichel, Ran
author_sort Ben David, Alon
collection PubMed
description Botulism is a paralytic disease caused by botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs). Equine antitoxin is currently the standard therapy for botulism in human. The preparation of equine antitoxin relies on the immunization of horses with botulinum toxoid, which suffers from low yield and safety limitations. The Hc fragment of BoNTs was suggested to be a potent antibotulinum subunit vaccine. The current study presents a comparative evaluation of equine-based toxoid-derived antitoxin (TDA) and subunit-derived antitoxin (SDA). The potency of recombinant Hc/A, Hc/B, and Hc/E in mice was similar to that of toxoids of the corresponding serotypes. A single boost with Hc/E administered to a toxoid E-hyperimmune horse increased the neutralizing antibody concentration (NAC) from 250 to 850 IU/mL. Immunization of naïve horses with the recombinant subunits induced a NAC comparable to that of horses immunized with the toxoid. SDA and TDA bound common epitopes on BoNTs, as demonstrated by an in vitro competition binding assay. In vivo, SDA and TDA showed similar efficacy when administered to guinea pigs postexposure to a lethal dose of botulinum toxins. Collectively, the results of the current study suggest that recombinant BoNT subunits may replace botulinum toxoids as efficient and safe antigens for the preparation of pharmaceutical anti-botulinum equine antitoxins.
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spelling pubmed-95065272022-09-24 Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin Ben David, Alon Barnea, Ada Torgeman, Amram Diamant, Eran Dor, Eyal Schwartz, Arieh Rosen, Osnat Caspi, Noa Saraf, Miki Lerer, Elad Adar, Yaakov Lupo, Edith Toister, Einat Zichel, Ran Vaccines (Basel) Article Botulism is a paralytic disease caused by botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs). Equine antitoxin is currently the standard therapy for botulism in human. The preparation of equine antitoxin relies on the immunization of horses with botulinum toxoid, which suffers from low yield and safety limitations. The Hc fragment of BoNTs was suggested to be a potent antibotulinum subunit vaccine. The current study presents a comparative evaluation of equine-based toxoid-derived antitoxin (TDA) and subunit-derived antitoxin (SDA). The potency of recombinant Hc/A, Hc/B, and Hc/E in mice was similar to that of toxoids of the corresponding serotypes. A single boost with Hc/E administered to a toxoid E-hyperimmune horse increased the neutralizing antibody concentration (NAC) from 250 to 850 IU/mL. Immunization of naïve horses with the recombinant subunits induced a NAC comparable to that of horses immunized with the toxoid. SDA and TDA bound common epitopes on BoNTs, as demonstrated by an in vitro competition binding assay. In vivo, SDA and TDA showed similar efficacy when administered to guinea pigs postexposure to a lethal dose of botulinum toxins. Collectively, the results of the current study suggest that recombinant BoNT subunits may replace botulinum toxoids as efficient and safe antigens for the preparation of pharmaceutical anti-botulinum equine antitoxins. MDPI 2022-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9506527/ /pubmed/36146601 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10091522 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ben David, Alon
Barnea, Ada
Torgeman, Amram
Diamant, Eran
Dor, Eyal
Schwartz, Arieh
Rosen, Osnat
Caspi, Noa
Saraf, Miki
Lerer, Elad
Adar, Yaakov
Lupo, Edith
Toister, Einat
Zichel, Ran
Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin
title Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin
title_full Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin
title_fullStr Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin
title_full_unstemmed Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin
title_short Immunologic and Protective Properties of Subunit- vs. Whole Toxoid-Derived Anti-Botulinum Equine Antitoxin
title_sort immunologic and protective properties of subunit- vs. whole toxoid-derived anti-botulinum equine antitoxin
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9506527/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36146601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vaccines10091522
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