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Babesia bigemina: identification of B cell epitopes associated with parasitized erythrocytes.

TitleBabesia bigemina: identification of B cell epitopes associated with parasitized erythrocytes.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1995
AuthorsVidotto, O, McElwain, TF, Machado, RZ, Perryman, LE, Suarez, CE, Palmer, GH
JournalExp Parasitol
Volume81
Issue4
Pagination491-500
Date Published1995 Dec
ISSN0014-4894
KeywordsAnimals, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Antigens, Protozoan, B-Lymphocytes, Babesia, Babesia bovis, Blotting, Western, Cattle, Epitopes, Erythrocytes, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Precipitin Tests, Protozoan Proteins
Abstract

Rhoptries are involved in host cell invasion and rhoptry polypeptides, including the Babesia bigemina rhoptry-associated protein-1 (RAP-1), are targets for protective immune responses. Polyclonal antisera produced against isolated rhoptries is directed predominantly against RAP-1 and reacts with both the merozoite and the membrane of parasitized erythrocytes. To determine whether these B cell epitopes associated with the parasitized erythrocyte are derived from RAP-1 or, alternatively, from previously undetected merozoite polypeptides, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were generated from mice immunized with rhoptries isolated from the JG-29 clone of the Mexico strain. The anti-RAP-1 mAbs bound only merozoites in a punctate immunofluorescence pattern. A second group of four mAbs, none of which were reactive with RAP-1, bound the parasitized erythrocyte. Two of these latter mAbs, 64/44.17.3 and 64/05.7.2, reacted only with parasitized erythrocytes that had been permeabilized. MAb 64/44.17.3 bound a 54-kDa merozoite polypeptide while 64/05.7.2 bound a > or = 225-kDa merozoite polypeptide. MAbs 64/32.8.5 and 64/38.5.3 recognized epitopes on 17.5- and 76-kDa polypeptides exposed on the external surface of intact parasitized erythrocytes. The results indicate that the identified RAP-1 epitopes are not associated with the erythrocyte cytoskeleton or membrane and that anti-RAP-1 immunity is most likely generated against the free merozoite. All new mAbs reacted with every B. bigemina strain tested (Mexico, Puerto Rico, St. Croix, Texcoco, Jaboticabal). The conservation of RAP-1 epitopes among these strains supports the continued testing of RAP-1 as a vaccine component. In addition, the identification of epitopes expressed on the surface of erythrocytes infected with all five strains provides new candidate immunogens.

DOI10.1006/expr.1995.1142
Alternate JournalExp. Parasitol.
PubMed ID8542990