Purification and immunological characterization of HPLC-purified pertussis toxin subunits

1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 336-340
Author(s):  
Pele Chong ◽  
Stephen Cockle ◽  
Heather Boux ◽  
Michel Klein

Pertussis toxin (PT), an oligomeric exotoxin of Bordetella pertussis containing five dissimilar subunits, is considered to be an essential immunogen in acellular and component pertussis vaccines against whooping cough. A rapid single-step procedure for isolating PT subunits was developed using reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. Recoveries of individual subunits were 75% (S1), 70% (S2), > 90% (S3), > 90% (S4), and 50% (S5), as judged by SDS-PAGE and amino acid analysis. Lyophilized subunits were solubilized in urea followed by step-wise dialysis to remove the urea. All subunits were inactive in histamine sensitization, lymphocytosis, and hemagglutination assays. However, purified S1 retained residual NAD-glycohydrolase and ADP-ribosyltransferase activity. A partially active holotoxin could be generated by mixing the five individual subunits. All subunits were immunogenic in rabbits and mice. Monospecific antisera raised in both animal species were able to neutralize the PT-mediated clustering of Chinese hamster ovary cells, but active immunization of mice with single subunits failed to protect them in the intracerebral challenge assay. These subunit preparations therefore retained neutralizing determinants, but did not contain protective epitopes.Key words: pertussis toxin, high-performance liquid chromatography, purification, pertussis vaccine.

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