Article
Mycobacterium bovis BCG as a Delivery System for the dtb Gene Antigen from Diphtheria Toxin
Registro en:
NASCIMENTO, Dilzamar V. et al. Mycobacterium bovis BCG as a Delivery System for the dtb Gene Antigen from Diphtheria Toxin. American Journal of Molecular Biology, v.7, p.176-189, 2017.
2161-6620
2161-6663
Autor
Nascimento, Dilzamar V.
Dellagostin, Odir A.
Matos, Denise C. S.
McIntosh, Douglas
Hirata Jr., Raphael
Pereira, Geraldo M. B.
Guaraldi, Ana Luiza de Mattos
Armôa, Geraldo R. G.
Resumen
Diphtheria is a fulminant bacterial disease caused by toxigenic strains of Corynebacterium
diphtheriae whose local and systemic manifestations are due to
the action of the diphtheria toxin (DT). The vaccine which is used to prevent
diphtheria worldwide is a toxoid obtained by detoxifying DT. Although associated
with high efficacy in the prevention of disease, the current anti-
diphtheria vaccine, one of the components of DTP (diphtheria, tetanus and
pertussis triple vaccine), may present post vaccination effects such as toxicity
and reactogenicity resulting from the presence of contaminants in the vaccine
that originated during the process of production and/or detoxification.
Therefore, strategies to develop a less toxic and at the same time economically
viable vaccine alternatives are needed to improve existing vaccines in use
worldwide. In this study, the Moreau substrain of BCG which is used in Brazil
as a live vaccine against human tuberculosis was genetically modified to carry
and express the gene encoding for the diphtheria toxin fragment B (DTB). As
such, the DNA sequence encoding the dtb gene was cloned into the pUS977
shuttle vector for cytoplasmic expression and successfully introduced into
BCG cells by electroporation. Mice immunized with recombinant BCG expressing
DTB showed seroconversion with the detection of specific antibodies
against DTB. Also, rBCGs stably expressing DTB persisted up to 60 days in
the absence of selective pressure in mice and cell viability did not change significantly
during the period tested. Finally, immune sera from BALB/c mice
vaccinated with rBCGpUS977dtb PW8 were preliminarily tested for their capacity
of neutralizing the diphtheria toxin in the Vero Cells assay.