Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, November 2004, p. 1016-1021, Vol. 11, No. 6
1071-412X/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/CDLI.11.6.1016-1021.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Laboratoire de Parasitologie, Mycologie Médicale et Pathologie Exotique, Equipe d'Accueil E.A 3732, Faculté de Médecine de Lyon Service de Parasitologie et Pathologie Exotique, Hôpital de la Croix-Rousse, Lyon,3 CNRS UMR 5163Université Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France2
Received 28 January 2004/ Returned for modification 8 April 2004/ Accepted 26 August 2004
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
Serological tests available for the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis require antigens that are isolated either from peritoneal fluid of acutely infected mice or from cultures. Production of large quantities of antigen can be limited by difficulties in standardization, which lead to batch-to-batch differences. Moreover, parasitic antigens used for serodiagnosis can be contaminated by host proteins. Recombinant antigens offer the possibility of developing standardized reagents and reducing their production costs. Use of the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with T. gondii recombinant proteins has already been reported for the detection of immunoglobulin G (IgG) by using a single antigen (9, 17, 18, 20-22) or a panel of peptides (1, 10, 14). Detection of specific IgM by using this type of reagent has already been reported (1, 16, 21). Results are not homogeneous, and none of the recombinant proteins tested is currently used routinely. Among the polypeptides already tested, GRA1 and GRA6 Nt (corresponding to the hydrophilic N-terminal region of GRA6), expressed by the tachyzoite and bradyzoite stages of the parasite, have been shown to react with human sera, and combined results yielded an overall sensitivity of 98% (12). In addition, GRA1 has been reported to be a good marker of chronic toxoplasmosis (4), and GRA6 has been reported to be a good marker of acute infection (20). Other recombinant proteins were investigated in order to distinguish between the two phases of infection (20-22). Results are difficult to compare, because the criteria for classification of the two phases of the disease differ among publications.
In this study, we investigated the abilities of the two recombinant proteins, GRA1 and GRA6 Nt, to detect specific IgG in sera of pregnant women with well-documented serological status in order to distinguish between the acute and chronic phases of toxoplasmosis.
|
|
|---|
Seroconversion follow-up. Fifty-three serum samples from 10 women with documented seroconversion were referred to our laboratory at the request of obstetricians or general practitioners to estimate the age of the fetus when maternal infection occurred and to follow up patient serology. Patient follow-up ranged from 8 to 27 weeks after the first positive serum sample was detected by routine ELISA.
Recombinant antigens. Methods for the construction of pGEX-derived plasmids and the production and purification of fusion proteins have been published previously (12). Briefly, the open-reading frame encoding amino acids 28 to 190 of GRA1 or amino acids 40 to 150 (the N-terminal hydrophilic region) of GRA6 was cloned into the pGEX-3X or pGEX-2T expression vector, respectively. Both peptides were expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 as glutathione S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins and were purified by using glutathione agarose beads (Sigma, St Quentin, France). Wild-type GST protein was also produced and used as a control.
ELISA using both recombinant GRA1 and recombinant GRA6 Nt. The optimal concentration of recombinant antigens for the coating of flat-bottom microtiter plates (Greiner, Frickenhausen, Germany) and dilutions of serum, conjugate, and substrate were determined by using the checkerboard method. Different dilutions of each coating antigen and matched quantities of GST were investigated in a final volume of 100 µl of carbonate-bicarbonate buffer (0.1 M; pH 9.6). Coated plates were hermetically sealed and stored at 4°C. Before use, they were washed three times with a standard washing solution (Enzygnost Toxoplasmosis IgG kit; Dade Behring) and blocked for 1 h at room temperature with 200 µl of 5% skim milk solution in phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.2). After five washes, 100 µl of human serum diluted in peroxidase sample buffer (Enzygnost Toxoplasmosis IgG kit; Dade Behring) was added to each well and incubated at 37°C for 3 h. After a wash, each well was incubated for 1 h at 37°C with 100 µl of anti-human IgG rabbit Fab' conjugated with peroxidase. After five washes, peroxidase activity was detected in the dark by use of tetramethylene benzidine dihydrochloride (Dade Behring). The reaction was stopped after 10 min by addition of 0.5 N sulfuric acid solution (Dade Behring). Absorbance was measured at 450 nm with a multiscan photometer (Thermolabsystems, Cergy Pontoise, France). Each sample was tested in triplicate on recombinant proteins, and the mean optical density (OD) was calculated on wild-type GST protein. The final result for each serum sample was calculated by subtracting the mean OD obtained for the control, GST, from the mean OD obtained for the recombinant fusion protein. A sample was considered positive if its final reading was higher than the mean of the negative samples plus 3 standard deviations (SD). Both the intra- and the interassay variability for each antigen were assessed by testing one positive and one negative serum sample 54 times in the same test and in triplicate in 16 different tests.
Statistical analyses. Differences between the acute and chronic profiles for GRA1 and GRA6 Nt were tested for significance by using the Mann-Whitney U test. A P value of <0.05 was considered statistically significant. Sensitivity and specificity were computed by using the time elapsed since infection (less than 3 months or more than 12 months) as the "gold standard."
|
|
|---|
Reactivity of T. gondii antibodies to the GRA1 recombinant protein. Figure 1 shows the results of the ELISA performed on three groups of patients by using the GRA1 fusion protein. The specificity of this test was 98%, because two negative serum samples showed ODs above the cutoff. There was a significant difference in OD between groups 1 and 2 (P < 0.001). Interestingly, only 11 of 32 serum samples in group 1 were positive, whereas 36 of 46 scored positive in group 2, yielding sensitivities of 34 and 78.2%, respectively, with an overall value of 60%. The predictive value of a positive test score was 23% for acute infection and 76.5% for chronic disease.
![]() View larger version (9K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. GRA1-IgG ELISA prepared with serum samples from three groups of pregnant women. Group 1 comprises 32 serum samples from patients with acute infection; group 2 comprises 46 serum samples from patients with chronic infection; and group 3 includes 100 serum samples that tested negative by a standard diagnostic ELISA. Horizontal line indicates the cutoff value. The mean ODs for groups 1 and 2 are significantly different (P < 0.0001).
|
![]() View larger version (9K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. GRA6 Nt-IgG ELISA prepared with serum samples from three groups of pregnant women. Group 1 includes 32 serum samples from patients with acute infection; group 2 corresponds to 46 serum samples from patients with chronic infection; and group 3 comprises 100 negative-control serum samples. Horizontal line indicates the cutoff value. The mean ODs for groups 1 and 2 are not significantly different (P = 0.88).
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Sensitivity improvement by combining results obtained with the GRA1 and GRA6 Nt-IgG ELISAs
|
Follow-up of seroconverting women. For each of the 10 patients, a negative sample was drawn and the time that elapsed between the taking of this sample and the first positive result was recorded. Additional serum samples were tested at various intervals. These samples covered at least the 2-month period that followed acute infection. The different serological profiles observed could be divided into three categories (Fig. 3). In four cases, the sample became positive simultaneously by routine ELISA and the anti-GRA1 and anti-GRA6 Nt ELISAs within 4 weeks after the last negative sample was drawn. (Fig. 3A). For such patients, neither GRA1 nor GRA6 Nt could distinguish between acute and chronic infections. In three cases, discordant profiles were observed: the anti-GRA6 Nt ELISA gave a positive score even before the routine ELISA, whereas GRA1 serology remained negative as late as 7 weeks after the first sample scored positive by routine ELISA (Fig. 3B). In the last category, both the GRA1 and the GRA6 Nt ELISA remained negative as long as 16 weeks after the first positive result by routine ELISA (Fig. 3C).
![]() View larger version (19K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Evolution of GRA1- and GRA6 Nt-specific IgG detected by ELISA compared with the evolution of IgG reacting with a parasite lysate (commercial kit) and expressed in international units. Follow-up of samples sequentially drawn from 10 pregnant women after seroconversion (represented by time zero). (A) Representative pattern of four cases: GRA6 Nt IgG and GRA1 IgG patterns correlated with the IgG profile obtained by routine ELISA. (B) Representative pattern of three cases: samples remained persistently negative by GRA1 ELISA. (C) Representative pattern of three cases: samples remained negative by both the GRA1 and GRA6 Nt ELISAs.
|
|
|
|---|
The combination of a positive GRA1 test with a negative GRA6 Nt test did not improve the sensitivity of the ELISA, whereas specificity reached a value of 100%. Combination of positive results obtained with either recombinant antigen reached a sensitivity of 91% for the detection of specific T. gondii antibodies irrespective of the date of contamination. The OD ratio obtained with the two antigens did not improve the accuracy of the test.
Follow-up of 10 women who seroconverted during pregnancy demonstrated the heterogeneity of the immune responses induced by these antigens (Fig. 3). The follow-up data clearly showed that the kinetics of the appearance of IgG directed against each of these recombinant proteins is highly variable, preventing the use of GRA1 and GRA6 Nt as reliable markers of the stage of infection. Moreover, the negative patterns found in three patients raised the problem of antibody specificity for strain type. It has recently been demonstrated that peptides specific to one of the three main types of T. gondii strains could elicit a specific immune response, with no cross-reactivity with the corresponding peptides derived from another type of strain (11).
The low overall sensitivity observed with GRA1 has already been reported by Lecordier et al. (12), although Beghetto et al. (2) showed that a recombinant GRA1 antigen fragment (residues 172 to 186) reacts strongly with serum samples from T. gondii-infected pregnant women. Lecordier et al. (12), using the same GRA6 Nt recombinant protein and testing 100 positive serum samples, reported a sensitivity of 96% compared with the value of 83% that we observed. Whether this difference is due to the size of the sampling remains to be investigated. They also observed that GRA1 may complement GRA6 Nt to improve sensitivity.
Several authors have reported attempts to distinguish between acute and chronic infections, but without conclusive results. Li et al. (13) reported that 85.3% of patients with acute toxoplamosis reacted with a 35-kDa recombinant protein, whereas only 8% of patients with chronic infections gave positive results. Tenter et al. (22), combining two recombinant polypeptides termed H4/GST and H11/GST, found that 68% of patients with patterns of acute infection reacted positively with one or both antigens. Conversely, only 14% of those with chronic infections recognized one or both antigens. Using a recombinant GRA6 polypeptide, Redlich and Müller (20) reported 86% sensitivity and 99.6% specificity in the detection of acute toxoplamosis. The main difficulty in comparing these results is that there is no consensus on the definition of either acute or chronic infection (21). Since the majority of Toxoplasma infections are subclinical, classification of serum samples into different groups sometimes relies only on the presence or absence of specific IgM. Such a classification is made problematic by the facts that the duration of IgM shows considerable variability among patients and that IgM can persist during the chronic phase (15). Additional Toxoplasma tests, such as the avidity assay (6) or the differential agglutination assay (7), could improve the accuracy of determination of the date of the infection, but these tests are limited by the heterogeneity of the immune response. French regulations, which offer nonimmune pregnant women the possibility of being tested every month during pregnancy, enabled us to detect and define precisely the date of seroconversion. We investigated serum samples from women who had been infected less than 3 months and more than 1 year previously. A majority of pregnant women have their first routine Toxoplasma test during the first trimester of pregnancy. In such cases, therefore, it is critical to determine accurately whether infection occurred before or after the beginning of gestation. In contrast, determining that infection has occurred more than 1 year previously is important when samples are taken late in pregnancy.
In conclusion, GRA1 and GRA6 Nt ELISAs cannot accurately differentiate between acute and chronic toxoplasmosis. Currently, no accurate tool allows such differentiation, and the best way to rule out a postconception infection is to draw a sample as early as possible in pregnancy. The investigation of stage-specific antigens may be rewarding. Since the transformation from tachyzoite (the invasive stage) to bradyzoite within the organism is a rapid phenomenon with respect to antibody secretion, an overlap of immunological responses to the two parasitic stages is likely to occur. More interestingly, at the immunological level, the avidity of antibodies toward stage-specific antigens could be a useful tool. One such study has already yielded promising results (3). Although recombinant proteins seem to be very promising for the diagnosis of toxoplasmosis, their performance, compared with that of the Toxoplasma lysates currently used in commercially available kits, needs to be improved, and the use of a cocktail of recombinant antigens may be advantageous. It has recently been demonstrated that combining peptides increases sensitivity in comparison with that of tests using the same antigens separately (1, 10). Moreover, extensive screening of recombinant antigen panels that are representative of the genetic diversity of Toxoplasma strains should be undertaken.
We thank Karine Kaiser for helpful discussions.
|
|
|---|
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»