Bordetella bronchiseptica a candidate mucosal vaccine vector /
Abstract (Summary)
Bordetella bronchiseptica colonizes the upper respiratory tract of a wide variety
of mammals and is involved in diseases such as kennel cough in dogs, atrophic
rhinitis in pigs and upper respiratory tract infections of laboratory animals. Studies
were focused on developing a heterologous antigen expression system in B.
bronchiseptica and to evaluate the potential of this organism as a candidate mucosal
vaccine vector. Since the role of Bordetella bronchiseptica and Pasteurella multocida
toxin (PMT) in the disease atrophic rhinitis of pigs was well documented, this
research was focused in the possibility of developing a refined vaccine to control this
disease. A promoter region related to heat shock protein genes was identified using a
green fluorescent protein reporter system. This promoter drove high-level expression
of GFP compared to a tac promoter or B. bronchiseptica fim N gene promoter. A nontoxic
protective P. multocida toxin fragment and GFP were expressed in B.
bronchiseptica in a broad-host-range plasmid vector PBBR1MCS2 under the control
of the promoter region identified. Colonization kinetics, plasmid stability, and
immune responses generated following intranasal inoculation of recombinant B.
bronchiseptica were evaluated. While wild type and recombinant B. bronchiseptica
colonized the mouse respiratory tract effectively, the plasmid was completely lost
from the organism after 72 hours post-inoculation. After a single intranasal
inoculation, B. bronchiseptica specific IgM, IgA and IgG responses were detected in
serum and respiratory lavage. However, PMT-specific antibodies were not detected.
Four intranasal inoculations with B. bronchiseptica expressing green fluorescent
protein (GFP) induced a GFP-specific systemic and mucosal immune response, while
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similar inoculations with B. bronchiseptica expressing PMT fragment did not induce
a PMT-specific immune response.
This study also evaluated the immune response to a chimeric protein generated
by combining a gene fragment encoding neutralizing epitopes of Mannheimia
haemolytica leukotoxin and a fimbrial protein gene (fim N) from B. bronchiseptica.
Immunization of mice with the recombinant chimeric protein elicited a significantly
stronger anti-leukotoxin antibody response than comparable immunizations with
fusion proteins lacking FIM N. The chimeric protein exhibited more stability.
Leukotoxin is an important virulence factor in shipping fever pneumonia in feedlot
cattle and is a critical protective antigen. This chimeric protein may be a candidate for
inclusion in new generation vaccines against shipping fever pneumonia. The results
of these studies strongly support the potential for developing B. bronchiseptica as a
candidate mucosal vaccine vector and FIM N as a carrier protein for heterologous
antigens.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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