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Parasitnlngy Research Parasitol Res (1989) 75:343-347 9 Springer-Verlag 1989 Characterization of a surface antigen of Eimeria nieschulzi (Apicomplexa, Eimeriidae) sporozoites Stanislas Tomavo 1, Jean-Francois Dubremetz t, and Rolf Entzeroth 2 1 Inserm, U42, Certia, 369, rue Jules - Guesde, 59650 Villeneuve - D'Ascq, France z Zoologisches Institut der Universit/it, Poppeldorfer Schloss, D-5300 Bonn 1, Federal Republic of Germany Abstract. A monoclonal antibody (McAb 3C3) reacting with a pellicular antigen of Eimeria nieschulzi sporozoites has been selected among hybridomas produced against this organism by immunofluorescence assay. This antigen has been shown to be located on the zoite surface by immunofluorescence on living organisms. Capping and shedding of antigen-monoclonal antibody immune complexes was observed upon incubation at 37 ~ C. On western immunoblotting, two polypeptides at 22 and 26 kDa were recognized by McAb 3C3, whereas only one polypeptide of 22 kDa was immunoprecipitated by the same antibody after lactoperoxidase surface radio-iodination of sporozoites. Coccidiosis is a complex intestinal disease caused by Eimeria species. Both humoral and celt-mediated immune reactions have been implicated in acquired immunity to coccidiosis (Long and Jeffers 1986). The goal of recent research is to identify parasite antigens that elicit protective immunity in the host; surface antigens of Eimeria sporozoites have been found to be prominent candidates (Brothers etal. 1988; Clarke etal. 1987; Crane et al. 1988; Gore and Newman 1986). During processes of recognition, invasion, and early development, parasite-host cell relationships play a key role in the successful infection of the host. Surface antigens are most likely to be involved during parasite-host cell contact and the interiorization of coccidian parasites (Augustine and Danforth 1985). In the present paper, we report on the characterization of a surface antigen of the rat coccidium E. nieschulzi and the interacReprint requests to: J.-F. Dubremetz tion of this antigen with a specific monoclonal antibody on living sporozoites. Materials and methods Monoclonal antibody production. Monoclonal antibodies (mcab) were obtained by the fusion of SP2/O myeloma cells with splenocytes of BALB/e mice immunized i.p. with sporozoites of E. nieschulzi emulsified in Freund's complete adjuvant. After two repeated immunizations 3 weeks apart with incomplete Freund's adjuvant, mice were boosted i.v. with 2 x 106 purified sporozoites lysed by freeze-thawing. The fusion was carried out 3 days later according to the method of Galfre et al. (1977). Screening of hybridomas was done by immunofluorescence assay and Western blotting; positive hybridomas were cloned by limit dilution. Mass production of mcabs was accomplished by the injection of hybridoma cells into pristan-primed BALB/c mice and subsequent collection of ascitic fluids. Only one of the mcabs obtained (3C3) is described here. Surface iodination of parasites. Purified sporozoites of E. nieschulzi were surface-labelled with 125I by lactoperoxidase-catalyzed radioiodination (Marchalonis etat. 1971). A total of 10 x 106 sporozoites were resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS : 150 mM NaC1, 50 mM sodium phosphate buffer; pH 7.4)containing 10 gl/ml 12SI-sodium (3.7109 Bq/ml, carrierfree; Amersham), 5 gg/ml lactoperoxidase (Calbiochem, 100 IU/mg), 1.25 gM KI, and 40 gM H202. This suspension was incubated at 4~ C for 10 min with mild agitation. Labelling was stopped by adjusting the suspension to 30 mM NAN3. Labelled sporozoites were then washed twice with PBS and processed for immunoprecipitation. [mmunoprecipitation. Radioiodinated sporozoites were resuspended in a lysis solution containing 0.5% (v/v) Nonidet P40 (NP 40), 2 mM ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid, 10 mM KI, 1 mM phenyl methyl sulfonyl fluoride, and 0.1 mg/ml aprotinin in PBS and incubated for 1 h at 4~ C. The suspension was then centrifuged at 10000 g for 15 min and the supernatant fraction was used for immunoprecipitation. Aliquots of the lysates were taken for radioactivity measurement after trichloroacetic precipitation of proteins. Immune complexes were prepared by incubating the equivalent of 100000 counts/min (cpm) lysate with 20 ~1 ascitic fluid in i ml lysis buffer for 4 h at 4~ in a rotary shaker. The immune complexes were then purified by overnight incubation 344 S. Tomavo et al. : Eimeria surface antigen at 4 ~ on 20 lal immunosorbent prepared with rabbit antimouse IgG immunoglobulins absorbed on Protein A-Sepharose 4B (Pharmacia). The gel was washed five times with a washing buffer containing 1 M NaC1, 0.5% NP 40, and 10 m M KI in TRIS-HC1 buffer (pH 8.3) and then eluted with electrophoresis sample buffer. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDSPAGE) was carried out was according to the method of Laemmli (1970), using 12% (w/v) acrylamide separating gels. Molecular weight standards (Pharmacia, LMW kit) were used for calibration. Gels were stained with Coomassie blue R, dried, and exposed to Kodak X-O M A T A R film at - 8 0 ~ with Cronex Lightning plus intensifying screens (DuPont). Western blotting. Purified sporozoites were separated by SDSP A G E ' u n d e r nonreducing conditions (10 v sporozoites per 1-cm-wide slot) and electrophoretically transferred to nitrocellulose at 200 mA (1 h) according to the technique of Towbin et al. (1978). The nitrocellulose sheet was then saturated for 30 min in 5% nonfat dry milk in buffer (140 m M NaC1 and 0.5% (v/v) Tween-20 in 15 m M TRIS-HC1; pH 8 : TNT). Strips were then cut and incubated with the various mcab solutions (mouse ascitic fluid diluted 1:200 in TNT) for 1 h at 37 ~ C. After washing, the sheet was incubated in peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse IgG serum (Nordic) diluted in TNT and developed with diaminobenzidine. Immunofluorescence assay. For hybridoma screening, purified sporozoites were washed three times with PBS and dried on standard immunofluorescence assay (IFA) slides, which were stored at - 2 0 ~ C. I F A was carried out at 37 ~ C after a 10-rain fixation in cold acetone. For surface fluorescence, purified tachyzoites were used either alive or after a 5-min fixation with 2% (v/v) formalin in PBS; they were incubated in fluoresceinconjugated rabbit anti-mouse IgG antibodies, all steps being carried out at 4 ~ C. Light and electron microscopy. For studying surface antigen before and after invasion, E. nieschulzi sporozoites were incubated in 3C3 ascitic fluid for 15 rain, washed in PBS suspended in Minimum Essential Medium (MEM), inoculated onto monolayers of 3T3 cells at a density of 10 6 sporozoites/cm z, and incubated at 37 ~ C. Indirect immunodetection techniques were used in this study. For immunofluorescence, fluorescein-conjugated rabbit anti-mouse IgG immunoglobulins diluted 1:50 were used. For electron microscopy, peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG Fab fragments (Nordic) were also diluted 1:50. All dilutions and washes were done in PBS (pH 7.4); mcab and immune sera were diluted 1 : 25. Immunofluorescence was carried out on either living sporozoites or sporozoites or cells fixed for 30 rain in 3% formalin in PBS. For the detection of intracellular sporozoites, fixed monolayers were treated with cold acetone (Lazarides and Weber 1974). When the sporozoites had been preincubated with mcab before interaction with the cells, this step was omitted after fixation. Observations were done using a Leitz Orthoplan microscope equipped for epifluorescence; pictures were taken on Kodak Ektachrome 400 film. For immunoperoxidase detection, the monolayers were fixed with paraformaldehyde picric acid (Stephanini et al. 1967) for I h at 4 ~ C, followed by overnight washing in PBS: cells were then equilibrated for 1 h in 10% glycerol in buffered saline and were frozen in liquid nitrogen for 10 s. The specimens were then successively incubated in normal goat serum diluted 1 : 30 in PBS, mcab 3C3, and peroxidase conjugate for 30 rain, with Fig. 1. (a) Immunoblot of SDS-Page total E. nieschulzi sporozoite proteins probed with mcab 3C3 under reduced (+DDT) conditions. (b) Immunoblot of SDS-Page total E. nieschulzi sporozoite proteins probed with mcab 3C3 under nonreduced ( - D D T ) conditions. (c) Autoradiogram of total NP-40 extract of E. niesehulzi sporozoites after surface 112s iodination. (d) Autoradiogram of E. nieschulzi iodinated surface proteins after immunoprecipitation with mcab 3C3 extensive washing in PBS between each step. When the sporozoites had been pretreated with mcab 3C3 before the interaction, this step was omitted after fixation. The coverslips were then fixed with 1% glutaraldehyde in PBS for 10min and washed in buffered saline for 30 min. The peroxidase was revealed by a 3-rain incubation in 0.05% diaminobenzidine in 0.1 M TRIS-HC1 buffer (pH 7.4, 0.006% H2Oz). After washing, the monolayers were postfixed in 2% OsO~ in 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) for 2 h at 4 ~ C, dehydrated, and embedded in Epon. After polymerization, parasite-rich areas were selected, punched off the plastic sheet, glued on an Epon block, and sectioned parallel to the plane of the monolayer. Unstained S. Tomavo et al. : Eimeria surface antigen 345 Fig. 2. Indirect immunofluorescentlight micrograph of live E. nieschulzi sporozoites after incubation with mcab 3C3 and labeling with anti-mouseFtTC. Note the differentdegree of immune-complexcapping, x 760. Fig. 3. Electronmicrograph of an E. niesehulzi sporozoite after incubation with mcab 3C3 and labeling with peroxidase conjugate. The entire surface of the parasite is labeled. The beginning of immune-complexcapping is indicated by a few electron-dense vesicles (arrows). ap, apical pole; rh, rhoptries; pp, posterior pole; rb, refractile body, x 8350. Fig. 4. Higher magnificationof the posterior pole (pp) of a sporozoite, showing the partially labeled surface interrupted by nonlabeled plaques (arrows). Note the accumulation of capped vesicular immune complexes (es). x 23750 thin sections were observed with a HitachiU 12 electronmicroscope. Results The 3C3 mcab was tested on Western blots of E. nieschulzi sporozoite proteins after electrotransfer from SDS-PAGE. Sporozoite antigens were tested under reduced (Fig. 1, a) and non-reduced conditions (Fig. 1, b). Two antigens (22 and 26 kDa) reacted specifically on an immunoblot under reduced conditions; the 22-kDa band stained more intensely than the 26-kDa band (Fig. 1, a). Under nonreduced conditions, two major bands of equal intensity were observed at 22 and 24 kDa (Fig. 1, b). Surface iodination of Nonidet P 40 extracts of sporozoites followed by SDS-PAGE analysis under reduced conditions showed the existence of four major molecules of 66, 26, 22, and 16 kDa (Fig. 1, c). On immunoprecipitation of this extract, mcab 3C3 reacted only with the 22-kDa band (Fig. 1, b). Light and electron microscopy Live sporozoites of E. nieschulzi, incubated with mcab 3C3 and labeled with anti-mouse fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC), showed a bright surface fluorescence (Fig. 2, lower right). However, at 10-20 rain after incubation, live sporozoites had capped immune complexes at their posterior pole (Fig. 2); this was followed by shedding of the complexes, resulting in nonlabelled, live sporozoites. Electron micrographs of sporozoites incubated with mcab 3C3 before the invasion of host cells showed a homogeneous surface labelling after incubation with peroxidase conjugate and revelation with diaminobenzidine (Fig. 3). Internal organelles [rhoptries (rh), micronemes (ran), refractile bodies (rb)] were not affected by the incubation procedure. After the incubation of live sporozoites with mcab 3C3 for 15 min, different stages of surfaceimmune-complex capping were revealed by electron microscopy. Single as well as clustered vesicles with an electron-lucent inner core and electron- 346 dense periphery and measuring 10-15 nm were shed from the surface of the sporozoites (Fig. 3). The formerly complete electron-dense, labelled surface of the parasites showed patches of nonlabelled membrane (Fig. 4, arrows). Finally, the labelled surface immune complexes were shed at the posterior pole of the sporozoite (Fig. 4). Discussion From its reactivity by IFA with the surface of live E. nieschulzi sporozoites, we conclude that mcab 3C3 recognizes a surface antigen on these organisms. This was also confirmed by immunoprecipitation data, since mcab 3C3 immunoprecipitates a radioactive protein comigrating with polypeptide found by iodinating sporozoites via the lactoperoxidase procedure. When electrophoresed under reducing conditions, this antigen has a mol.wt, of 22 kDa after iodination. The reaction of mcab 3C3 on Western blots was more complex, as two bands were identified on gels containing reduced or non-reduced sporozoite proteins; this may be due either to the fact that 3C3 would recognize an epitope common t o two antigens, one of which would not be on the sporozoite surface, or to the existence of a 26-kDa intracellular precursor of the 22-kDa surface antigen. The four surface antigens of E. nieschulzi sporozoites were similar in molecular weight to the surface antigens of E. acervulina, E. maxima, E. tenella, and E. nieschulzi previously described by Wisher (1986). The capping phenomenon has been described in coccidian Sporozoites for several ligands (Russell and Sinden 1981; Augustine and Danforth 1982), and the capping of mcab immune complexes by coccidian sporozoites has been described for E. tenella (Speer et al. 1983a, 1983b, 1985). These authors showed that a secondary conjugate was needed for the capping of mcab on the sporozoite surface, which was also the case in the present study. Capping of mcabs has also been found in Toxoplasma gondii (Dubremetz et al. 1985), but in that case capping and shedding occurred only during host cell invasion. In both cases, however, immunolabelled vesicles accumu, lated on the posterior extremity of the sporozoites, which was also the case with E. nieschulzi in the present study and indicates that ligands are associated with the capping of antigens. We did not determine whether the antigen against which mcab 3C3 reacts remained on the surface of the sporozoites after capping and shedding of the immune S. Tomavo et al. : Eimeria surface antigen complexes. Further study is needed to elucidate how these organisms modulate the interaction of their surface molecules with antibodies. It is not clear whether immune-complex capping reflects a mechanism by which the parasite evades the hostcell immune response (resembling the shedding of CS-protein in Plasmodium spp. ; Cochrane et al. 1976) or represents a phenomenon of membrane turnover and fluidity related to cell motility (Heath 1983; Bretscher 1984). Acknowledgements. The authors thank C. Ansel and M. Mortuaire for excellent technical assistance. This study was funded by INSERM and a stipend from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) to R. Entzeroth. References Augustine PC, Danforth HD (1982) Effect of cationized ferritin an the invasion of cultured cells by Eimeria meleagrimitis sporozoites. J Protozool 29:489 Augustine PC, Danforth HD (1985) Effects of hybridoma antibodies on invasion of cultured cells by sporozoites of Eimeria. Avian Dis 29:1212-1223 Bretscher MS (1984) Endocytosis: relation to capping and cell locomotion. 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Nature 216:173 Towbin H, Staehelin T, Gordon J (1978) Electrophoretic transfer of proteins from polyacrylamide gels to nitrocellulose sheets: procedure and some applications. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 76:4350-4354 Wisher MH (1986) Identification of the sporozoite antigens of Eimeria tenella. Mol Biochem Parasitol 21:7-17 Accepted October 1, 1988