4.4 Article

Isolation and characterization of porcine monoclonal antibodies revealed two distinct serotype-independent epitopes on VP2 of foot-and-mouth disease virus

Journal

JOURNAL OF GENERAL VIROLOGY
Volume 102, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/jgv.0.001608

Keywords

B cell; universal epitope; foot-and-mouth disease virus; monoclonal antibody; pig

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32072873, 31902288]
  2. Key Research and Development Plan Project in Ningxia Province, China [2019BBF02005]
  3. National Key Research and Development Program of China (973 programme) [2017YFD0501104, 2016YFD0501500]

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Pigs are susceptible to foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), and the humoral immune response plays a crucial role in protection. Antibodies from pigs recognize conserved antigen epitopes on capsid protein VP2 and exhibit broad reactivity against both FMDV serotypes A and O. The study reveals a novel method for analyzing the antibody response against FMDV in pigs at the clonal level.
Pigs are susceptible to foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV), and the humoral immune response plays an essential role in protection against FMDV infection. However, little information is available about FMDV-specific mAbs derived from single B cells of pigs. This study aimed to determine the antigenic features of FMDV that are recognized by antibodies from pigs. Therefore, a panel of pig-derived mAbs against FMDV were developed using fluorescence-based single B cell antibody technology. Western blotting revealed that three of the antibodies (1C6, P2-7E and P2-8G) recognized conserved antigen epitopes on capsid protein VP2, and exhibited broad reactivity against both FMDV serotypes A and O. An alanine-substitution scanning assay and sequence conservation analysis elucidated that these porcine mAbs recognized two conserved epitopes on VP2: a linear epitope ((KKTEETTLL10)-K-2) in the N terminus and a conformational epitope involving residues K63, H65, L66, F67, D68 and L81 on two beta-sheets (B-sheet and C-sheet) that depended on the integrity of VP2. Random parings of heavy and light chains of the IgGs confirmed that the heavy chain is predominantly involved in binding to antigen. The light chain of porcine IgG contributes to the binding affinity toward an antigen and may function as a support platform for antibody stability. In summary, this study is the first to reveal the conserved antigenic profile of FMDV recognized by porcine B cells and provides a novel method for analysing the antibody response against FMDV in its natural hosts (i.e. pigs) at the clonal level.

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