Neutralising Effects of Different Antibodies on Clostridioides difficile Toxins TcdA and TcdB in a Translational Approach

Author:

Csukovich Georg1ORCID,Kramer Nina1,Pratscher Barbara1ORCID,Gotic Ivana2,Freund Patricia1,Hahn Rainer3ORCID,Himmler Gottfried2,Brandt Sabine4ORCID,Burgener Iwan Anton1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Small Animal Internal Medicine, Department for Companion Animals and Horses, Vetmeduni, 1210 Vienna, Austria

2. The Antibody Lab GmbH, 1210 Vienna, Austria

3. Department for Biotechnology, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, 1190 Vienna, Austria

4. Research Group Oncology (RGO), Clinical Unit of Equine Surgery, Department for Companion Animals and Horses, Vetmeduni, 1210 Vienna, Austria

Abstract

Given the high prevalence of intestinal disease in humans and animals, there is a strong need for clinically relevant models recapitulating gastrointestinal systems, ideally replacing in vivo models in accordance with the principles of the 3R. We established a canine organoid system and analysed the neutralising effects of recombinant versus natural antibodies on Clostridioides difficile toxins A and B in this in vitro system. Sulforhodamine B cytotoxicity assays in 2D and FITC-dextran barrier integrity assays on basal-out and apical-out organoids revealed that recombinant, but not natural antibodies, effectively neutralised C. difficile toxins. Our findings emphasise that canine intestinal organoids can be used to test different components and suggest that they can be further refined to also mirror complex interactions between the intestinal epithelium and other cells.

Funder

The Austrian Research Association FFG

Austrian Academy of Sciences

Vetmeduni

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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