Polymeric IgA is superior to monomeric IgA and IgG carrying the same variable domain in preventing Clostridium difficile toxin A damaging of T84 monolayers.


Autoria(s): Stubbe H.; Berdoz J.; Kraehenbuhl J.P.; Corthésy B.
Data(s)

2000

Resumo

The two exotoxins A and B produced by Clostridium difficile are responsible for antibiotic-associated enterocolitis in human and animals. When added apically to human colonic carcinoma-derived T84 cell monolayers, toxin A, but not toxin B, abolished the transepithelial electrical resistance and altered the morphological integrity. Apical addition of suboptimal concentration of toxin A made the cell monolayer sensitive to toxin B. Both toxins induced drastic and rapid epithelial alterations when applied basolaterally with a complete disorganization of tight junctions and vacuolization of the cells. Toxin A-specific IgG2a from hybridoma PCG-4 added apically with toxin A alone or in combination with toxin B abolished the toxin-induced epithelial alterations for up to 8 h. The Ab neutralized basolateral toxin A for 4 h, but not the mixture of the two toxins. Using an identical Ab:Ag ratio, we found that recombinant polymeric IgA (IgAd/p) with the same Fv fragments extended protection against toxin A for at least 24 h in both compartments. In contrast, the recombinant monomeric IgA counterpart behaved as the PCG-4 IgG2a Ab. The direct comparison between different Ig isotype and molecular forms, but of unique specificity, demonstrates that IgAd/p Ab is more efficient in neutralizing toxin A than monomeric IgG and IgA. We conclude that immune protection against C. difficile toxins requires toxin A-specific secretory Abs in the intestinal lumen and IgAd/p specific for both toxins in the lamina propria.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_443FECD44886

isbn:0022-1767

pmid:10657645

isiid:000085296600042

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of immunology, vol. 164, no. 4, pp. 1952-60

Palavras-Chave #Antibody Specificity; Bacterial Proteins; Bacterial Toxins; Cell Line; Cell Membrane; Clostridium difficile; Enterotoxins; Epithelial Cells; Humans; Immunoglobulin A; Immunoglobulin G; Immunoglobulin Variable Region; Tight Junctions; Time Factors
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article