Author:
de Jersey James,Bird Peter H.,Verma Naresh K.,Bradley Mark P.
Abstract
Attenuated
Salmonella typhimurium strains are potential
‘safe’ delivery vectors of an oral immunocontraceptive vaccine for
the European red fox (Vulpes vulpes). In the present
study, model bacterial (Escherichia coli heat-labile
enterotoxin B subunit, LTB) and fox sperm (fSP10) antigens were expressed in
S. typhimurium SL3261 (DaroA)
under the control of the trc promoter. Adult female
foxes were given three oral immunizations with SL3261 containing either LTB
(SL3261/pLTB), fSP10 (SL3261/pFSP10) or a control plasmid (pKK233-2 or
pTrc99A). All foxes raised serum (IgG) and vaginal (IgG and IgA) antibodies
against S. typhimurium lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Each
fox that received SL3261/pLTB raised high titre LTB-specific serum and
vaginal IgG antibodies. However, only one of four foxes immunized with
SL3261/pFSP10 raised an anti-fSP10 immune response, in the form of low
titre serum and vaginal IgG antibodies. No vaginal IgA antibodies were raised
against either LTB or fSP10 in these experiments. The immune responses against
recombinant LTB and fSP10 resulted chiefly from the initial dose of antigen in
the inocula and were minimally influenced by continued
in vivo antigen expression. This study demonstrates for
the first time in the female red fox that oral
Salmonella can elicit specific systemic and reproductive
tract antibodies against heterologous, recombinant proteins.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
7 articles.
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