These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: Bivalent recombinant vaccine for botulinum neurotoxin types A and B based on a polypeptide comprising their effector and translocation domains that is protective against the predominant A and B subtypes.
    Author: Shone C, Agostini H, Clancy J, Gu M, Yang HH, Chu Y, Johnson V, Taal M, McGlashan J, Brehm J, Tong X.
    Journal: Infect Immun; 2009 Jul; 77(7):2795-801. PubMed ID: 19398544.
    Abstract:
    The botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are a large family of extremely potent, neuroparalytic, dichain proteins which act at the peripheral nervous system. The wide genetic diversity observed with this neurotoxin family poses a significant challenge for the development of an effective botulinum vaccine. The present study describes a vaccine development platform based on protein fragments representing the N-terminal two-thirds of each toxin molecule. These fragments, designated LH(N), comprise the light chain and translocation domains of each neurotoxin and are devoid of any neuron-binding activity. Using codon-optimized genes, LH(N) fragments derived from BoNT serotypes A and B were expressed in Escherichia coli in high yield with >1 g of purified, soluble fragment recoverable from 4.5 liter-scale fermentations. The protective efficacy of LH(N)/A was significantly enhanced by treatment with formaldehyde, which induced intramolecular cross-linking but virtually no aggregation of the fragment. A single immunization of the modified fragment protected mice from challenge with a 10(3) 50% lethal dose (LD(50)) of BoNT/A(1) with an 50% effective dose (ED(50)) of 50 ng of the vaccine. In similar experiments, the LH(N)/A vaccine was shown to protect mice against challenge with BoNT/A subtypes A(1), A(2), and A(3), which is the first demonstration of single-dose protection by a vaccine against the principal toxin subtypes of BoNT/A. The LH(N)/B vaccine was also highly efficacious, giving an ED(50) of approximately 140 ng to a challenge of 10(3) LD(50) of BoNT/B(1). In addition, LH(N)/B provided single-dose protection in mice against BoNT/B(4) (nonproteolytic toxin subtype).
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]