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Infect Immun, August 1998, p. 3848-3855, Vol. 66, No. 8
Department of Pathology, University of
California, Irvine, Irvine, California
92697-4800,1 and
Forschungsinstitut
Borstel, Zentrum fur Medizin und Biowissenschaften, Medizinische und
Biochemische Mikrobiologie, 23845 Borstel,
Germany2
Received 30 October 1997/Returned for modification 16 January
1998/Accepted 27 April 1998
Identification of protective epitopes is one of the first steps in
the development of a subunit vaccine. One approach to accomplishing this is to identify structures or epitopes by using monoclonal antibodies (MAb) that can attenuate infectivity in vitro and in vivo.
To date attempts to use this approach with Chlamydia
pneumoniae have failed. This report is the first description of a
MAb directed to the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) of Chlamydia
that neutralizes both in vitro and in vivo the infectivity of C. pneumoniae. MAb CP-33, an immunoglobulin G2b (IgG2b), was
identified from a fusion using splenocytes from mice immunized with
C. pneumoniae TW-183. By Western blot analysis, MAb CP-33
exhibited genus-specific reactivity in that it recognized the LPSs of
C. pneumoniae, Chlamydia trachomatis, and
Chlamydia psittaci. MAb CP-33 did not react with 15 genera of gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria and Candida
albicans. By using isolated LPS of Re mutants of
Escherichia coli, Salmonella enterica serovar
Minnesota, and recombinants expressing the
3-deoxy-D-manno-oct-2-ulosonic acid (Kdo)
transferase gene kdtA of C. trachomatis, MAb
CP-33 was shown to require for binding the presence of the
genus-specific trisaccharide epitope
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Characterization of a Neutralizing Monoclonal
Antibody Directed at the Lipopolysaccharide of Chlamydia
pneumoniae
Kdo(2
8)
Kdo(2
4)
Kdo.
By employing synthetic oligosaccharides and neoglycoconjugates in an
enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and EIA inhibition, it was further shown that
MAb CP-33 differed from the extensively investigated prototype
chlamydial LPS MAb S25-23. Most likely, MAb CP-33 recognizes a
conformational epitope in which the
Kdo(2
8)
Kdo(2
4)
Kdo
trisaccharide is an essential structural component. When tested in an
in vitro neutralization assay, MAb CP-33 gave a 50% neutralization
titer of 8 ng/ml against C. pneumoniae TW-183. However,
this MAb did not neutralize other C. pneumoniae strains,
C. trachomatis, or C. psittaci. C. pneumoniae TW-183 was treated with either MAb CP-33 or a control IgG and then used
to inoculate mice by the respiratory route. Five days after
inoculation, there was a difference between the mice inoculated with
the control IgG-treated inoculum and those inoculated with the MAb
CP-33-treated organisms as to the number of mice infected as well as
the number of inclusion-forming units recovered from lung cultures
(P < 0.05). In summary, a
Chlamydia-specific LPS MAb was able to neutralize in vitro
the infectivity of C. pneumoniae TW-183.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Pathology, Medical Science Building, Room D440, University of
California
Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697-4800. Phone: (949) 824-4169. Fax:
(949) 824-2160. E-mail: epeterso{at}uci.edu.
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