Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, May 2005, p. 683-684, Vol. 12, No. 5
1071-412X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CDLI.12.5.683-684.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Biotechnology, Institute of Hygiene, School of Medicine, Universidad de la República, Uruguay, Av. Alfredo Navarro 3051, Montevideo, Uruguay,1 Laboratory of Immunotechnology, Department of Immunology, School of Chemistry-School of Science, Universidad de la República, Av. Alfredo Navarro 3051, Montevideo, Uruguay2
Received 22 November 2004/ Returned for modification 3 January 2005/ Accepted 14 March 2005
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A DNA fragment coding for SLO amino acid sequence 78 to 571 of the whole protein (5) was amplified by PCR, using appropriate primers and purified chromosomal DNA from S. pyogenes as template (10). Forward primer (5'-AATGGATCCCTTGCTCCCAAAGAAATGCC-3') corresponded to nucleotides 430 to 450 of the slo complete gene and was designed with addition of a BamHI (underlined) site at the 5' end. Reverse primer (5'-CCGGAATTCCTACTTATAAGTAATCGAACC-3') corresponded to nucleotides 1894 to 1914 and had an EcoRI site (underlined) added at the 5' end. PCRs were performed using a polymerase with proofreading activity (Vent Polymerase; New England Biolabs Inc., Hertfordshire, United Kingdom). The amplified fragment was ligated into plasmid pGEX-2T (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Uppsala, Sweden) previously digested with the same enzymes and transformed into Escherichia coli TG2 cells. Selected transformants were grown in Luria-Bertani broth, and expression of the glutathione S-transferase fusion protein was induced with isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG; Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.). Cells were recovered by centrifugation and disrupted by sonication, and the soluble GST-rSLO fusion protein was affinity purified with a glutathione-Sepharose column (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) (13). Purified protein yield was 1.5 mg/liter. Analysis of the purified product by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed two bands of similar intensity corresponding to approximately 77 kDa and 27 kDa and a third band of minor intensity of approximately 70 kDa (data not shown). The two major bands (77 kDa and 27 kDa) were consistent with the predicted sizes for GST-rSLO and GST, respectively. Immunoblot analysis demonstrated that human anti-SLO sera recognize the bands of 77 kDa and 70 kDa, whereas a mouse anti-GST serum recognizes all bands; preincubation of anti-GST mouse serum with soluble GST resulted in a marked reduction of all bands in the immunoblot (Fig. 1). These results confirm that all three bands contain GST and that the two bigger bands were different forms of GST-rSLO fusion, while the 27-kDa band seems to correspond to GST alone. The shorter fusion may be a degradation product or a modified form of the fusion protein due to alternative translation termination sites within the slo gene, resulting in the expression of shorter fragments of SLO (11, 14). The appearance of a product with a molecular weight corresponding to GST that is only recognized by anti-GST serum could be the result of sensitivity of the hybrid protein to host's proteases or early stop in the transcription/translation process. Similar results have been reported with other proteins fused to GST (12, 13). Early stop in the transcription/translation process could arise from the presence in the fused gene of codons of low usage in E. coli, generating a pause in the ribosome traffic when these codons are reached (8). Changes in the codon usage to fit with the codon bias of the host organism could be an appropriate strategy to improve the expression of a heterologous gene (6, 15), presumably by securing to a straightforward ribosome traffic.
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FIG. 1. Analysis of the purified extract by immunoblotting. The material eluted from the glutathione-Sepharose column was separated according to molecular weight on 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immediately transferred to nitrocellulose for analysis by antigenic recognition. Nitrocellulose strips were assessed with the following: lane 1, anti-SLO human serum 1/500 and developed with an anti-human IgG conjugated to alkaline phosphatase 1/1,000; lane 2, mouse anti-GST serum 1/200 and developed with an anti-mouse IgG conjugated to alkaline phosphatase 1/1,000; lane 3, mouse anti-GST serum previously incubated with GST (0.0075 mg/ml) and developed with anti-mouse IgG conjugated to alkaline phosphatase 1/1,000; lane 4, negative control.
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Thirty-four human sera obtained from patients with recent S. pyogenes infection (collected at the University Hospital, School of Medicine, Universidad de la República, Uruguay) were assessed using either a specially designed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) that uses the GST-rSLO and a latex agglutination test (Rheumagen ASO, Biokit Inc., Barcelona, Spain) that uses native SLO (3). Titers obtained by latex agglutination technique have discontinuous distribution, and those obtained by ELISA are continuously distributed; thus, the ELISA results were made discrete for comparison. Compared in this way, anti-SLO titers obtained by both methods showed good correlation (r = 0.9646; Fig. 2). However, when we applied the Wilcoxon rank sign test for a paired experiment (7), we did not find significance to the null hypothesis that proposes that results were the same by either method. This lack of correlation could be attributed to the intrinsic error of the latex technique (+/ one dilution) and to differences in the dilution schemes employed by the two assays.
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FIG. 2. Correlation between anti-SLO antibody titers measured by ELISA and by latex agglutination. ELISA and latex results were plotted, and their statistical relationships were assessed using log-transformed values.
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