Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, November 1998, p. 862-870, Vol. 5, No. 6
1071-412X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Institut National de la Recherche
Agronomique, Laboratoire de Pathologie Infectieuse et Immunologie,
37380 Nouzilly, France,1 and
Unité
d'Immunologie-Microbiologie,
Received 30 March 1998/Returned for modification 22 June
1998/Accepted 15 July 1998
Smooth Brucella strains are classified into three
serotypes, i.e., A+M
,
A
M+, and A+M+,
according to slide agglutination with A and M monospecific polyclonal sera. The epitopes involved have been located on the O-polysaccharide (O-PS) moiety of the smooth lipopolysaccharide (S-LPS), which represents the most exposed antigenic structure on the surface of
Brucella spp. By use of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) a
number of epitope specificities on the O-PS have been reported: A, M, and epitopes shared by both A and M dominant strains, which have been
named common (C) epitopes. The latter have been further subdivided, according to relative MAb binding in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays
(ELISA) to A- and M-dominant Brucella strains and to
cross-reacting Yersinia enterocolitica O:9, into five
epitopic specificities: C (M>A), C (M=A), C/Y (M>A), C/Y (M=A), and
C/Y (A>M). In the present study, we studied the occurrence of these
epitopes at the surface of representatives of all Brucella
species and biovars including the live vaccine strains by analyzing the
levels of MAb binding to whole Brucella cells in ELISA and
flow cytometry assays. In ELISA, the level of MAb binding correlated
well with the previously defined epitope specificity and the serotype
defined by polyclonal sera for each Brucella species,
biovar, or strain. However, MAbs to the C (M=A) and C (M>A) epitopes
showed insignificant binding to B. suis biovar 2 strains
and bound at lower titers to B. suis biovar 3 and B. neotomae than to the other Brucella strains. Some of
the flow cytometry results were contradictory to those obtained by
ELISA. In fact, it appeared by flow cytometry that all O-PS epitopes,
including the A and M epitopes, are shared to different degrees by
Brucella spp. which nevertheless show a high degree of O-PS
heterogeneity according to MAb binding intensities. The subdivision of
MAb specificities and Brucella serotypes was therefore less
evident by flow cytometry than by ELISA. Whereas in ELISA the MAb
specific for the A epitope showed insignificant binding to Y. enterocolitica O:9, this MAb bound strongly to Y. enterocolitica O:9 in flow cytometry. One of the two MAbs
specific to the C (M=A) epitope also bound at a low but significant
level to B. suis biovar 2 strains. However, as in ELISA the
MAb specific for the C (M>A) epitope did not bind at all to B. suis biovar 2 strains in flow cytometry. Flow cytometry provided
new information regarding specificity of the MAbs and may further
explain some aspects of the capacity of passive protection of some MAbs
against smooth Brucella infection in mice. As shown in the
present study the occurrence of Brucella strains apparently
completely devoid of one specific C O-PS epitope (e.g., B. suis biovar 2 devoid of the C [M>A] epitope) offers the
possibility of obtaining vaccine strains devoid of a diagnostic O-PS
epitope, which could further help to resolve the problem of
discriminating infected from vaccinated animals that remains a major
goal in brucellosis research.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut
National de la Recherche Agronomique, Laboratoire de Pathologie
Infectieuse et Immunologie, 37380 Nouzilly, France. Phone: 2 47 42 78 72. Fax: 2 47 42 77 79. E-mail:
Axel.Cloeckaert{at}tours.inra.fr.
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