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Infection and Immunity, May 2005, p. 3083-3095, Vol. 73, No. 5
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.5.3083-3095.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Cheryl I. Champion,1,
Alek Dooley,2
David L. Cox,4
Julian P. Whitelegge,2,3
Kym Faull,2 and
Michael A. Lovett1
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases,1 Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, The Pasarow Mass Spectrometry Laboratory,2 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095,3 Division of STD Laboratory Research, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 303334
Received 19 November 2004/ Returned for modification 22 December 2004/ Accepted 14 January 2005
Immunization with purified Treponema pallidum outer membrane vesicles (OMV) has previously resulted in high-titer complement-dependent serum bactericidal activity. In this study, OMV immunization resulted in the isolation of a monoclonal antibody, M131, with complement-dependent killing activity. Passive immunization of rabbits with M131 administered intravenously conferred significant immunity demonstrated by the failure of syphilitic lesions to appear at 29% of intradermal challenge sites (7/24) and a mean delay of approximately 8 days to lesion appearance at the remaining sites (17/24). M131 not only bound to OMV and to the surfaces of intact motile T. pallidum cells but also bound to organisms whose outer membranes were removed, indicating both surface and subsurface locations for the killing target. This target was determined to be a T. pallidum lipid. Lipid extracted from T. pallidum and made into liposomes bound M131. Reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography separation and fraction collection mass spectrometry (LC-MS+) of T. pallidum lipid showed that the target of M131 was phosphorylcholine. M131 binding required both liposome formation and a critical concentration of phospholipid containing phosphorylcholine, suggesting that the epitope has both a conformational and a compositional requirement. M131 did not react with red blood cells, which have phosphorylcholine-containing lipids in their exterior membrane leaflets, or with Venereal Disease Research Laboratory antigen that also contains phosphorylcholine, further indicating the specificity of M131. This is the first physical demonstration of an antigen on the T. pallidum surface and indication that such a surface antigen can be a target of immunity.
D. R. Blanco and C. I. Champion are co-first authors.
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