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CLONING AND CHARACTERIZATION OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEIN(S) OF Pasteurella multocida SEROTYPE B:2 (P52) Thesis Submitted to the Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, PANTNAGAR-263 145 (Udham Singh Nagar), Uttarakhand, INDIA By Archana Yadav IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF Doctor of Philosophy (MICROBIOLOGY) April, 2008 Acknowledgement I feel great pleasure to express my regards, deep sense of gratitude and indebtedness towards my advisor, Dr. Anita Sharma Assistant Professor, Department of Microbiology and Chairman of my advisory committee for her help and encouragement in the preparation of the manuscript. I express deepest gratitude and heartiest thanks to Dr, V. D. P. Rao, Professor, Veterinary Microbiology and Registrar of the University for providing me facilities for conducting the research. I would like to take this opportunity to express my profound sense of gratitude to Dr. Mumtesh Kumar Saxena, Assistant Professor, Animal Biotechnology Centre and member of my advisory committee for his invaluable and critical suggestions. It was due to his planning, constructive criticism, encouragement and support through out research that made possible for me to complete this study. I would like to express my profound sense of gratitude to the members of my advisory committee Dr. Reeta Goel, Professor and Head Department of Microbiology, and Dr. Dinesh Yadav, Associate Professor, Molecular Biology and Genetic Engineering, for their generous support and guidance during the course of my study. Thanks are due to Dean C.B.S.H. and Dean P.G.S. for providing all the necessary facilities during the course of investigation. I take this opportunity in expressing my heartfelt thanks to Dr, Sameer Srivastava, Assistant Professor for his gregarious nature and continuous motivation. Thanks are due to Dr. Manvika Sahgal, J.R.O. Microbiology, Dr. Soma Marla Assoc Professor and Vinay Singh of Bioinformatics centre of GBPUAT Pantnagar for their sincere help. I am highly thankful to Mr. A. B. Sati, Mr. L. M. Padaliya, Mr. Pathak , Mr. Mahesh, Ramchandra and Shriram for providing necessary help whenever it was needed during full period of my study. Wordly thanks cannot express my respect towards my seniors Moni mam, Gunjan mam and Bablu sir for their co-operation and help during the course of study. Thank you Dr. Shantanu for sharing the quest for knowledge in all aspects. My friends Hemlata, Manu, Sunita, Shraddha and Amit deserve a special thanks. Words fail to express the depth of my feelings for my loving parents who displayed affection love, care, silent support and constant encouragement and ever open arms, which has rought to me this stage. I owe my ever feelings to my motherin-law, brother-in-law, brother (Sanjay bhaiya), sisters (Madhu Di, and Shashi Di ) for their ever encouraging words, extreme confidence, true love and faith they shower upon me. I place my compliments to my dear sister Neelam who support me in tough phases during the study. No words of gratitude will be able to express my feelings to words my beloved husband Dr. V. K. Singh (strength of my life), for their numerous sacrifices in all aspects during these four years period and tremendous understanding which were moral boosting to me during my study. ABOVE ALL THANK YOU GOD Pantnagar April, 2008 (Archana Yadav) Authoress Dr. Anita Sharma Department of Microbiology College of Basic Sciences & Humanities G. B. Pant Univ. of Agric. & Tech., Pantnagar - 263 145, Distt.– Udham Singh Nagar, Uttarakhand, INDIA Assistant Professor CERTIFICATE This is to certify that the thesis entitled “CLONING CHARACTERIZATION OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEIN(S) OF multocida SEROTYPE AND Pasteurella B:2 (P52)” submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY with major in MICROBIOLOGY and minor in MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND GENETIC ENGINEERING of the College of Post-Graduate Studies, Govind Ballabh Pant University of Agriculture and Technology, Pantnagar, is a record of bona-fide research carried out by ARCHANA YADAV, Id. No. 31741 under my supervision and no part of the thesis has been submitted for any other degree or diploma. The assistance and help received during the course of this investigation have been acknowledged. (Anita Sharma) Chairman Advisory Committee C E R T I F I C A T E We, the undersigned, members of the Advisory Committee of ARCHANA YADAV, Id. No. 31741 a candidate for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY with major in MICROBIOLOGY and minor in MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND entitled AND “CLONING PROTEIN(S) OF GENETIC ENGINEERING, agree that the thesis CHARACTERIZATION Pasteurella multocida OF SEROTYPE OUTER MEMBRANE B:2 (P52)” may be submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree. (Anita Sharma) Chairman Advisory Committee (V.D.P. Rao) Member (Dinesh Yadav) Member (Reeta Goel) Member (Mumtesh Saxena) Member CONTENTS S. N. Chapters 1. Introduction 2. Review of Literature 3. Materials and Methods 4. Results 5. Discussion 6. Summary References Appendix Annexure Vita Abstract Pages Chapter 1 Introduction Haemorrhagic septicaemia (HS) is an acute pasteurellosis, caused by particular serotypes of Pasteurella multocida and manifested by an acute and highly fatal septicemia mainly in cattle and water buffaloes; the latter are thought to be more susceptible. HS has a wide distribution particularly in tropical countries like Africa and Asia. In Asia, HS epidemics occur as an alarming and devastating disease problems in cattle and buffaloes. Disease outbreaks mostly occur during mansoon season when high temperature prevails with high humidity. This disease is caused by Pasteurella multocida, a Gram-negative coccobacillus residing as a commensal organism in the upper respiratory tract of the animals. Asian serotype B:2 and the African serotype E:2 (Carter and Heddleston system), corresponding to 6:B and 6:E (Namioka-carter system) are mainly responsible for the disease. In wild animals, serotype B:2,5 is predominantly present. The association of other serotypes, namely A:1, A:3 with a HS-like condition in cattle and buffaloes in India has also been recorded (OIE, 2005). On the basis of distribution of the disease, three distinct categories of different countries have been identified by FAO-WHO-OIE. India comes under the category A, where the disease is endemic and is of great importance. HS is a disease of utmost economic importance particularly in Asia and to a lesser extent in Africa. In Asia, susceptible animal population consists of 432 million cattle and 146 million buffaloes, constituting 30 and 95% of the world’s cattle and buffalo population respectively. The high population of buffalo in Asia, their high susceptibility and fatality to HS and high fatality show the significance of the economic losses due to this disease. In other Asian countries like Sri Lanka around 15% buffaloes and 8% cattle in the HS endemic areas died of HS annually in 1970. Other countries in South Asia also ranked HS as the most economically important infectious disease. In Pakistan, the annual economic losses have been estimated at 1.89 billion rupees due to this disease (De Alwis, 2002). Economic losses due to HS are not only confined to animal industry but rice production is also affected on account of its high prevalence among draught animals used in rice fields. The organism causing HS does not survive outside the animal body to any significant degree. Moist conditions prolong the survival of the organism. Thus the disease tends to spread more during the wet season. The onset of the monsoon in Asian countries also set into motion other activities such as rice cultivation which bring about movements of animals, work stress in work animals, etc. all of which favour the precipitation of outbreaks of this disease. HS is a primary bacterial disease and could be effectively treated by the wide range of antibiotics currently available. However, treatment is constrained by a host of practical considerations. Animals can be cured only if treated in the earlier stages of the disease. Usually chemotherapy is done by either streptomycin or oxytetracycline administered by intramuscular route at fairly high dosage. Penicillin and ampicillin are also widely used. Antibiotic resistance for streptomycin and sulfonamides has been reported in P. multocida (Kedrak and Borkowska-Opacka, 2001). Tragically, treatment for HS is of limited value due to the acute nature of the disease and vaccination is the only effective method of controlling the disease. Numerous whole cell and subunit vaccines were previously developed and tried against this disease with varying degree of success. Hence there is a paramount urgency of identification of potential immunogens of P. multocida which can lead to preparation of more effective vaccines and implementation of new vaccination strategies. Effective vaccines against HS are formalin killed bacterins or dense bacterins with adjuvants. Adjuvants enhance the level and prolong the duration of immunity. The most effective bacterin is oiladjuvant-one dose provides protection for 9-12 months. The alumprecipitated-type bacterin is given at 6- months intervals. These vaccines provide only short term immunity (Chandrasekaran et al., 1994) and require annual administration for maximum effectiveness (De Alwis 1992). The oil- adjuvanted vaccines have disadvantage of high viscosity which makes them unpopular among field users. A live intranasal vaccine prepared from a B: 3,4 serotype of deer origin is being used with reported success in southeast Asia. Live vaccines stimulate protection against a wide range of P. multocida serotypes and for longer periods, but at present live vaccines are undefined and may revert to virulence leading to death in vaccinated population. For live strains to be used as vaccines, the mode of attenuation should be well defined and constructed in such a way that the possibility of reversion to virulence is minimized (Tabatabaei et al., 2007). Earlier P. multocida was considered to be non pathogenic for human being but recent reports indicate that it may cause lung cancer in human (Goussard et al., 2006). So, for mass production of killed vaccine handling of such dreaded organism is not advisable. Previous studies on vaccine development against P. multocida using experimental animals demonstrated that the protective component(s) resided primarily in the outer membrane of the organism. The outer membrane proteins (OMPs) of P.multocida play significant role in host-pathogen interactions and are important determinants of immunoprotection hence can serve as vaccine candidate against haemorrhagic septicaemia (Basagoudanavar et al., 2006). To overcome from these problems several efforts have been made to develop safe and efficient vaccine. Aromatic mutant vaccine (Homchampa et al., 1992, 1997) and r-DNA vaccine have been tried and some promising results have been reported in lab animals (Lee et al., 2007). Recombinant vaccine is a novel vaccine technology that has been applied to stimulate protective immunity against many infectious agents. Recombinant vaccines do not harm the host, since it is a single protein, not the organism itself. In r-DNA vaccine preparation the most important criteria is to target an immunopotent gene. OMP(s) have been targeted as subunit vaccine showing promising results (Ruffolo and Adler 1996; Luo et al., 1997; Lee et al., 2007). Present study was taken up to study the immunopotential of OMP(s) of Pasteurella and to clone the gene encoding outer membrane protein(s) of P. multocida P52 (serotype B:2) in E. coli with the following objectives: 1. To purify outer membrane proteins of P. multocida P52 strain 2. To identify major immunodominant OMPs. 3. To clone and sequence the gene(s) encoding 87 and 34 kDa outer membrane protein(s) of P. multocida P52. Review of Literature Chapter 2 Review of Literature 2.1 HISTORY AND DISTRIBUTION Haemorrhagic septicaemia is one of the most economically important diseases of cattle and buffaloes. It is caused by two specific serotypes of a gram negative organism, Pasteurella multocida. ‘Pasteurellosis’ is one of the oldest diseases described in literature. The first systematic study of an outbreak of septicaemic pasteurellosis in deer, cattle, and swine was carried out by Bollinger (1878) in Germany and the causative agent was isolated by Kitt (1885). During the same era, the so-called ‘Golden age of Bacteriology’ the microorganisms causing fowl cholera (Pasteur, 1880), and rabbit septicaemia (Gaffky, 1881) were also discovered. The disease in buffalo was described as ‘Barbone’ by Oreste and Armanni (1886). A German pathologist Hueppe (1886) proposed the name ‘Haemorrhagic septicaemia’ for the disease. In 1901 Ligniers used generic name ‘Pasteurella’. Presently accepted name Pasteurella multocida (Multocida : fatal for many) was suggested by Rosenbusch and Merchant (1956). Pasteurella multocida, a Gram negative, non motile, facultative, coccobacillary organism is incriminated for a number of animal diseases (Confer et al., 1991) and has been classified into five serogroups (A, B, D, E, and F) based on capsule antigens. They are further classified into 16 serotypes (1-16) based primarily on lipopolysaccharide antigens using the Heddleston scheme (Carter, 1955; Heddleston et al., 1972). Two haemorrhagic septicaemia serotypes of the organism designated as B:2 and E:2 (Carter Heddleston system) were found equivalent to Nomioka 6:B and 6:E serotypes. Infections caused by P. multocida include fowl cholera of poultry (Rhoades and Rimler, 1989), progressive atrophic rhinitis of pigs (Chanter and Rutter, 1989), pneumonia of cattle, sheep and pigs (Chanter and Rutter, 1989; Frank, 1989), and haemorrhagic septicaemia of cattle and water buffaloes in certain enzootic areas of Asia and Africa (Carter and De Alwis, 1989). This pathogen is also associated with atrophic rhinitis (Krametter et al., 2004) and septicaemia of sheep (Watson and Davies, 2002). In addition, it is also responsible for infections in deer (Aalbaek et al., 1999), rhinitis (‘snuffles’) and pneumonia in rabbits (Manning et al., 1989). Although relatively uncommon, human infections have also been observed in a range of sites, commonly following cat or dog bites (Holm and Tarnvik, 2000). Asian serotype B: 2 and African serotype E:2 are considered primarily as the causative agent of classical HS of cattle and buffaloes (Dawkins et al., 1991). Kumar (1996) have reported association of A: 1, A: 3, F: 3 and F: 3, 4 with HS-like and/or similar diseases in India. Association of these organisms with classical fatal HS still needs to be confirmed, though these serotypes may play a role in causing other clinical manifestations like pneumonic Pasteurellosis leading to animal’s death. The most predominant serotype reported in Asian region is B:2. In African countries the predominant serotype is E: 2. In countries like Egypt and Sudan, both B:2 and E:2 serotypes have been reported by Mustafa and Shigidi., (1979). Voigts et al. (1997) reported HS due to B: 2 serotype of P. multocida in Namibia. In wild animals, serotype B:2,5 is predominantly present (OIE, 2005). 2.2 THE DISEASE: HAEMORRHAGIC SEPTICAEMIA (HS) Haemorrhagic septicaemia (HS) of cattle and buffaloes occurs as catastrophic epidemics with high morbidity and mortality in South East Asia, South Africa, Australia, Europe and India (DeAlwis, 1999). This disease has been characterized having three phases (DeAlwis, 1996). During the first phase, there is elevation of temperature, second phase is characterized by respiratory distress followed by third phase or terminal phase of recumbency. In natural conditions, generally the disease is characterized by high fever and depression which is followed by sudden death of the animal. Edema of head and neck and bleeding from natural orifices may be observed (Shewen and Conlon, 1994). Haemorrhages and edema of serous and mucous surface and in lymph node, spleen, lung and other visceral organs are the predominant post-mortem findings of this disease (Carter and DeAlwis, 1989). The extent of lesions has been shown to depend on duration of the clinical disease, in per acute case, where death occurred within 24-36 h, no more than a few scattered petechial hemorrhages could be observed in some experimental studies (DeAlwis et al., 1978). Adherence of the organism to respiratory tract is considered to be an important factor for pathogenesis. Some surface and secreted factors of P. multocida have been identified for adhesion, but no single factor could be associated with the virulence of organism. It has been shown that highly virulent type B strains produce hyaluronidase enzyme which contributes significancy in outcome of infection. Bivalent cation like iron has an important role in this respect. Due to excessive hemorrhage, Fe++ level increases favoring bacterial adherence and their growth in the animal (Babiuk and Campos, 1993). The septicaemia in HS is essentially a terminal symptom that’s why blood samples taken from the sick animals before death may not always contain P. multocida (DeAlwis, 1989). Organisms are not consistently present in the nasal secretions of sick animals (DeAlwis, 1989) which indicates that bacterimea is followed quickly by death of the animal. Humoral type immunity is predominantly reported in HS. As the organism does not grow facultatively or intracellularly, so the role of cellular immunity is limited. The oil adjuvant and bacterin vaccines elicit immune response of IgG for longer duration and IgM for short duration (Dawkins et al., 1991). Verma and Jaiswal (1997) reported the appearance of cellular and humoral immunity as early as 7 days of post inoculation which persist upto one year in cattle. 2.3 DISEASE INCIDENCES AND ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE 2.3.1 International status HS is a disease of utmost economic importance particularly in Asia and to a lesser extent in Africa. In Asia, the susceptible animal population consists of 432 million cattle and 146 million buffaloes, constituting 30 and 95% of the world’s cattle and buffalo population respectively. The high population of buffalo in Asia, their high susceptibility to HS and high fatality show the significance of the economic losses due to this disease. In Sri Lanka, in1970, around 15% buffaloes and 8% cattle in the HS endemic areas died of HS annually. Other countries in South Asia also ranked HS as the most economically important infectious disease. In Pakistan the annual economic losses have been estimated of 1.89 billion rupees (De Alwis, 2002). 2.3.2 Indian status HS is endemic in most parts of India and seasonal outbreaks are quite common. Andhra Pradesh ranks first in the total number of HS attacks reported in India in the past five years followed by Gujarat and Karnataka (Rajasekhar, 2005). Dutta et al., (1990) have reported that the overall relative risk due to HS in India during the period of 19741986 was highest in Manipur and lowest in Dadra and Nagar Haveli. In Assam, Karnataka and Maharastra an increase in the relative risk was observed during the period of 1977 to 1979 but this trend decreased during subsequent years. The authors have also identified Andhra Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Rajasthan and Arunachal Pradesh as high risk states, Karnataka and Maharastra as medium risk areas and Sikkim, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Goa, Pondicherry and Chandigarh as disease free zones for 1983-1986. It accounts for loss of more than 10 million rupees per annum in India (Singh et al., 1996). 2.4 ANTIGENS OF PASTEURELLA MULTOCIDA In general, bacterial strains that possess capsules are more virulent than their acapsular variants (Snipes et al., 1987; Tsuji and Matsumoto, 1989). Role of capsule in the pathogenesis of P. multocida has been clearly demonstrated by Boyce and Adler, (2000). A genetically defined acapsular serotype B mutant was more susceptible to murine macrophages than to its wild-type parent. Lipopolysaccharide also plays a critical role in pathogenesis of disease. It stimulates humoral immunity and is considered to be protective antigen. Intravenous inoculation of lipopolysaccharide from serotype B: 2 could reproduce clinical signs of haemorrhagic septicaemia in buffalo (Horadagoda et al., 2002). A complete lipopolysaccharide structure was required for replication in vivo and causing disease (Harper et al., 2004). Although the role of hyaluronidase in pathogenesis has not been determined, but it is present in B: 2 serotype of P. multocida that causes bovine haemorrhagic septicaemia. A study of 176 strains of P. multocida representing different serotypes has observed hyaluronidase activity confined to serotype B, but more specifically to B: 2. It was suggested that hyaluronidase activity could be used to presumptively identify B:2 strains (Rimler and Rhoades, 1994). Colonisation of host tissues by Gram- negative bacteria is facilitated by various adhesins, one of which is type 4 fimbriae (pili). These structures have been associated with pathogenesis in several bacterial species and have also been shown to mediate colonisation of epithelial surfaces. Type 4 fimbriae were identified and characterised in P. multocida strains A, B and D (Ruffolo et al., 1997), it’s gene ptfA has been sequenced from a number of strains indicating variations in the ptfA sequences at serotype level (Doughty et al., 2000). 2.4.1 Iron regulated and iron acquisition proteins Iron is an essential growth factor for all bacteria. The low concentration of free iron on the mucous membranes and tissues is one of the first line of defence against bacterial infection. The acquisition of iron is possibly the major determinant for a pathogen to maintain itself inside an animal host. Bacteria present several mechanisms to take up this element. Organisms like E.coli or Salmonella Typhimurium, produce siderophores which are secreted outside cells and are able to remove iron from the host environment or from the host iron-binding molecules (Ratledge and Dover, 2000). Other bacteria, like Haemophillus influenza and Neisseria meningitides, present outer membrane proteins able to interact with iron binding host molecules, such as haemin, haemoglobin, transferin or lactoferin (Ratledge and Dover, 2000). In both the cases, transport of iron across the outer membrane is an active process requiring a functional TonB system. Similarly P. multocida has developed multiple mechanisms for iron uptake. Sequence analysis of P. multocida PM70 revealed that a relatively large proportion of the genome (over 2.5%) encodes 53 proteins with similarity to proteins involved in iron uptake or acquisition (May et al., 2001). P. multocida expresses several outer membrane proteins ranging from 35 to 109 kDa molecular weight when grown under iron restricted conditions, which mediate iron acquisition in vivo. (Veken et al., 1994; Zhao et al., 1995; Ikeda and Hirsh, 1988). Comparison of P. multocida grown in iron-rich, iron-depleted media or in vivo has demonstrated that many high molecular weight outer membrane proteins are regulated by iron levels and have been called iron- regulated outer membrane proteins (IROMPs) (Snips et al., 1988; Choi-Kim et al., 1991). P. multocida grown under iron limited conditions also induces a stronger protective response in mice compared with the same strain grown under iron-replete conditions (Kennett et al., 1993), and it is thought that IROMPs may play significant role in cross-protective immunity (Glisson et al., 1993; Ruffolo et al., 1998). IROMPs have several attributes to be used as vaccine candidates. They are surface exposed molecules expressed in vivo during infection and elicit protective and bactericidal antibodies in laboratory animals. 2.5 MULTIPLE DRUG RESISTANCE Various antibiotics like sulfonamides, tetracyclines, penicillin and chloramphenicol are effective against HS if administered early. Because of the rapid course of the disease and the difficulty to access the animals, antimicrobial therapy remains impracticable. Although resistance to multiple antibiotics has been reported for some strains of P. multocida but it is not described for HS serotypes. The complete nucleotide sequence of a naturally occurring 5.36 kb streptomycin and sulphonamide resistance plasmid, designated pIG1, isolated from typed D P. multocida was determined by Wright et al., 1997. Verma et al. (2004) revealed that the majority of P. multocida isolates were sensitive to enrofloxacin, gentamycin and chloramphenicol and resistant to sulphadimidine, oxytetracycline, streptomycin, amoxicillin and tetracycline. Shivachandra et al. (2004) found that avain strains were most sensitive to chloramphenicol (73.98%), followed by enrofloxacin (71.54%), lincomycin (64.23%) norfloxacin (61.79%) and doxycycline-HCl (56.91%). Arora et al. (2005) showed that P. multocida isolates from different animal species were sensitive to enrofloxacin, pefloxacin, gentamicin and chloramphenicol and resistant to cotrimoxazole, erythromycin and streptomycin. 2.6 BIOLOGICALS IN CURRENT USE Haemorrhagic septicaemia if treated well in time, responds to antibacterial agents. But due to acute nature of the disease and short duration of clinical symptoms, it becomes difficult to treat the animal well in time. So timely vaccination is the only practical approach to control the disease. Various vaccine types have been developed against this disease, among which broth bacterin, oil adjuvant vaccine, double emulsion vaccine and a live vaccine are quite common (Verma and Jaiswal, 1998). 2.6.1 Bacterins Broth bacterins provide only one and a half to two months immunity and may induce toxic shock due to the endotoxin present in the bacterin (Carter and De Alwis, 1989). 2.6.2 Alum percipitated vaccine Iyer et al. (1955) developed alum precipitated vaccine, which provided immunity for a period of six months. Despite the fact that APV is known to provide immunity for short duration but it is still the most common vaccine in use, as it is the easiest vaccine to inject. It constitutes nearly 80 % of haemorrhagic septicaemia vaccine production in south-east and south Asian countries (Myint and Jones, 2007). 2.6.3 Adjuvant vaccine (OAV) Bains and Jones (1955) have described for the first time the oil adjuvant vaccine (OAV) using formalin killed whole organism which is now being used in our country as a prophylactic measure. OAV provided stronger immunity lasting atleast for one year but due to its high viscosity it is not convenient to administer which makes it unpopular among field users (De Alwis, 1992). Shah et al. (1997) prepared an improved oil adjuvant vaccine using Mineral oil and Mercol 52 as adjuvant together with Span 85 and Tween 85 as emulsifiers which when tested in cattle showed good protection upto 250 days upon challenge with 109 viable bacteria sub-cutaneously. Atthi et al. (2001) studied the onset and duration of immunity to haemorrhagic septicaemia oil adjuvant (water in oil) vaccine in cattle containing P. multocida B: 2,5 bacterin. The vaccine was reported to be protective in cattle even after 24 months of post vaccination. Burns et al. (2003) evaluated the effect of heat on oil-emulsion P. multocida bacterin. Commercial bacterin when heated to 410C for 5 hr reduced local tissue reaction without any deleterious effect on its immunity as measured by ELISA and other challenge studies. Indonesia and Srilanka have been successfully using lower levels of lanoline, an emulsifying agent, to reduce viscosity. In Thailand, OAV with lower viscosity has been developed and routinely used (FAO, 2005). 2.6.4 Multiple Emulsion Vaccine (MEV) To overcome from the problem of high viscosity of OAV, double emulsion vaccine (Yadav and Ahooja, 1983) has been developed. Chandrasekaran et al. (1991) showed that double emulsion vaccine was as effective as the oil adjuvant vaccine and demonstrated immunity for 52 weeks of post vaccination. Verma (1995) reported that MEV against HS was able to protect calves upto one year. Verma and Jaiswal (1997) vaccinated calves with multiple emulsion HS vaccine and observed that both humoral and cell mediated immune response contribute to protect vaccinated animals. 2.6.5 Live vaccines A live vaccine made with P. multocida serotype B:3, 4 isolated from a fallow deer protected cattle against a serotype B:2 challenge and conferred immunity against HS for one year in cattle vaccinated subcutaneously (Myint et al., 1987). A local reaction in the form of lump at the site of inoculation (S/C and I/D) was observed in vaccinated animals (Khar et al., 1992). Safety, efficacy and crossprotectivity of a live intranasal HS vaccine were tested in young cattle and buffaloes in Myanmar (Myint et al., 2005). Seven months after vaccination, three out of three buffaloes were protected and twelve months after vaccination, three of four buffaloes were protected against a subcutaneous challenge with serotype B:2. The serum of vaccinated cattle cross-protected mice against infection with P. multocida serotypes E:2, F:3, 4 and A:3, 4. 2.7 OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEINS 2.7.1 Structure and function The outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria contains a number of components: phospholipid layer, outer membrane proteins (OMP), and lipolpoysaccharides (LPS). It contains a number of proteins including major outer membrane porins and other proteins. It protects gram-negative bacteria against a harsh environment. At the same time, the embedded proteins fulfill a number of tasks that are crucial to the bacterial cell, such as solute and protein translocation, as well as signal transduction. Henderson et al. (1996) mentioned that approximately 50% of the dry matters of outer membranes of gram-negative bacteria consisted of more than twenty immunochemically different fragments. Some of the major outer membrane proteins called porins, are highly immunogenic and expose epitopes on the bacterial surfaces. They are conserved in the bacterial species because they show high homology in primary amino acid sequence and secondary structures and are antigenically related (Jeanteur et al., 1991). About 50% of the outer membrane mass consists of protein, either in the form of integral membrane proteins or as lipoproteins that are anchored to the membrane by means of N-terminally attached lipids. More than a dozen, different outer membrane lipoproteins have been identified in E.coli (Blattner et al., 1997). Exposure at the cell surface has led to the exploitation of outer membrane proteins by pathogenic agents such as bacteriophages and bacteriocins (Table 2.1). During the last two decades we have been witnessing exciting advances in the field of membrane proteins. The three-dimensional structures of membrane proteins revealed the existence of two structural motifs, α-helices and β-barrels in these proteins. β-barrel membrane proteins (outer membrane proteins, OMPs) differ from the all-β structural class of globular proteins due to the presence of a lipid environment and different structural motifs compared with α-helical membrane proteins. Table 2.1: Structure and functional features of prototype outer membrane proteins from E.coli. Protein family Small β barrel membrane anchors Small β barrel membrane anchors Membrane integral enzymes General(non specific) porins Substrate specific porins TonBdependent receptors Prototype protein OmpA OmpX PldA(OMPLA) OmpF LamB FhuA Function Physical linkage between OM and peptidoglycan Neutralizing host defence mechanisms Hydrolysis of phospholiids Diffusion pore for ions and other small molecules Maltose and maltodextrin uptake Uptake of ironsiderophore complexes; Bacteriophages K3, M1 K20 Bacteriocins Colicin K,colicin L Colicin N Oligomeric state Monomer Monomer 8 8 Number of transmembrane β strands Domain structure Two co-linear Domains One domain Monomer/dimer 12 One domain λ Homotrimer 16 One domain T1, T5 Colicin M Homotrimer 18 One domain Monomer 22 Two inter connected domains The dielectric constant within a lipid bilayer is very low compared with that of the aqueous environment. Membrane proteins thus expose a hydrophobic surface to the lipid bilayer core, a property that distinguishes them from water-soluble proteins. This also implies that a maximum number of hydrogen bonds of the protein segment located in the lipid bilayer are formed. Therefore, long before the first structure of a membrane protein was determined, it was predicted that only regular secondary structure elements (a-helices and b-sheet) could occur within the lipid bilayer in order to saturate the entire main-chain hydrogen bonding potential. All donor and acceptor groups could be saturated either intrasegmentally, as in the case of α helices, or intersegmentally by the formation of hydrogen bonds between adjacent β-strands (Rosenbusch, 1988). 2.7.2 Influence of amino acid residues in sequence and structure of OMPs The analysis on the three dimensional structures of OMPs shows the presence of Ser, Asn and Gln residues which play important role in the stability and function of OMPs and also required in the formation of β-barrel structures in the membrane, stability of binding pockets and the function of OMPs (Gromiha et al., 2006). OmpA is one of the major outer membrane proteins and plays a structural role in the integrity of the bacterial surface. X-ray structural analysis of OmpA revealed that eight antiparallel β-strands are connected by three short periplasmic turns and the presence of four relatively long surface exposed loops (Fig 2.1). A cluster of highly conserved charged residues (Lys-12, Glu-52, Arg-96, Arg-138 and Glu140) was uncovered, which builds up a network of salt bridges and hydrogen bonds and may explain extraordinarily high thermal stability of OmpA. Fig 2.1: Structure of OmpA transmembrane domain The general diffusion pores formed by porins allow the diffusion of hydrophilic molecules (<600 Da) and show no particular substrate specificity despite some selectivity for either cations or anions. Porins form homotrimers in the outer membrane. In each monomer, 16 βstrands span the outer membrane. Unlike the other loops, the third loop, L3, is not exposed at the cell surface but folds back into the barrel, forming a constriction zone at half the height of the channel, giving it an hourglass-like shape. Therefore, this loop contributes significantly to the permeability properties, such as exclusion limit and ion selectivity, of the pore. Interestingly, this loop contains a sequence motif, PEFGG, that is highly conserved among enterobacterial porins (Jeanteur et al., 1991). At the constriction site, a strong transverse electrostatic field is caused by acidic residues in loop L3 and a cluster of basic residues at the opposite barrel wall (Fig 2.2). Fig 2.2: Constriction site of OmpF 2.8 OMP - PRIME CANDIDATE FOR VACCINE The surface of Gram-negative bacteria is critical for interaction of the bacterium with the host cell environment as it mediates nutrient uptake, secretion of toxins and other products and is involved in avoidance of the host immune system (Neiman et al., 2004). Furthermore, it is the bacterial surface molecules that are the targets for host immunity. Bacterial surface proteins have been shown to be important for conferring protective immunity in a range of infection models (Brown et al., 2001; Frazer et al., 2006). P. multocida PlpB protein was identified as a cross-protective antigen (Tabatabai and Zehr, 2004; Rimler, 2001) and this protein is located in the outer membrane (Boyce et al., 2006). Outer membrane proteins also promote adherence to host cell surfaces and are therefore likely to be involved in P. multocida virulence (Boyle and Finlay 2003). Bioinformatics analysis of the P. multocida genome predicted 129 proteins as secreted, located in the outer membrane, or lipoproteins (Al-Hasani et al., 2007). They identified novel immunogens like PlpB, Lpp, OmpA, Omp16, Omph, PM1614 (Outer membrane antigenic lipoprotein) and Oma87 in P. multocida which are expressed during natural infection in chicken with the organism. Outer membrane proteins of P. multocida are believed to be important protective antigens. Knight et al. (1990) isolated outer membrane of various serogroups of P. multocida . Their electrophoretic patterns were remarkably different from those of P. haemolytica. SDSPAGE and immunoblot analysis of P. multocida serotype B:2 revealed that two polypeptides of 30 and 37 kDa were prominent. It was postulated that the 30 and 37 kDa polypeptides were the major polypeptides present in serogroup B:2. Confer et al. (1996) quantified the serum antibody response of outer membrane proteins (OMPs) of P. multocida A: 3 for cattle vaccinated with the homologous serogroup. Antibody responses to individual OMP were detected by western blot analysis and were generated by densitometry. Antibody to 11 prominent OMPs of 100, 97, 90, 85, 74, 53, 46, 35, 32, 21, and 16 kDa were identified and quantified. Purified OMP from P. multocida serotype B:2 was used to prepare vaccine against HS (Pati et al., 1996). Buffalo calves vaccinated with OMP provided complete protection against challenge with virulent organism. Srivastava et al., (1998) have grown P. multocida serotype B: 2 under iron restricted condition to enhance the production of iron regulated OMPs. No difference in conferring protection in mice and rabbits was observed using vaccines prepared from P. multocida cells grown under iron deficient and iron sufficient medium. But the Ab titres were found to be significantly higher in case of vaccine consisting P. multocida grown under iron-restricted condition .The author suggested that vaccine prepared from P. multocida under iron restricted condition might be more effective than the vaccine prepared from the organism grown in normal medium. However, proteomic analysis of IROMPs identified PM0805, that was upregulated and the other, OmpW, that was down regulated under low-iron conditions (Boyce et al., 2006). Srivastava et al., (1998) extracted OMP from P. multocida B:2 and studied its ability to immunize against P. multocida infection and resist phagocytosis by murine peritoneal macrophages. Inoculation of OMP in rabbits resulted in the production of agglutinating antibodies, which passively protected mice against P. multocida challenge and caused lysis of virulent P. multocida in vitro. Confer et al. (2001) vaccinated rabbits intranasally on day 0, 7 and 14 with P. multocida A:3 outer membrane protein (OMP) expressing iron regulated OMP (IROMP). Some vaccines included cholera toxin (CT) as an adjuvant. OMP-CT vaccinated individuals developed enhanced resistance with both mucosal and systemic antibody responses against challenge exposure but intranasal counts were not significantly reduced. Vaccination with IROMP-CT resulted in mucosal and systemic antibodies to challenge exposure and significantly reduced nasal bacterial counts. Chawak et al. (2001) characterized the OMP extracted from the P. multocida grown in iron sufficient and iron restricted media by SDSPAGE analysis and immunoblotting. Under iron sufficient condition presence of nine proteins ranging from 17kDa to 87kDa and seven immunogens with 17 and 25.7 as immunodominant proteins were observed using immunoblotting. Under iron restricted medium an additional protein of 97.8kDa was found to be immunogenic. Pal et al. (2002) studied the heat modifiable characteristics of OMP from vaccine strain to know their basic characteristics on event of temperature rise. A major band of 32kDa and two minor bands of approximately 38 and 28kDa were found to be heat modifiable. They suggested that boiling at 1000C in the presence of β-mercaptoethanol for 5 min is sufficient for characterization of OMP by SDS-PAGE. Tomer et al. (2002) characterized the outer membrane proteins of vaccine strain and observed about 20 polypeptide bands with molecular weight ranging from 16 to 90 kDa. They found three polypeptides of MW 31, 33 and 37 kDa as the major OMPs. Anshu et al. (2005) revealed the presence of 11 protein fractions of HS vaccine strain and found two major OMPs of 32 and 35 kDa in capsular type B isolates. Arora et al. (2007) found a homogenous OMP profiles of 17 different P. multocida isolates of bovine origin comprising 23 different polypeptides bands ranging in molecular weight from 13 to 94 kDa. On the basis of stain intensity, 32 kDa protein appeared to be major protein band followed by the presence of two bands of 25 kDa and 28 kDa. Apart from this other significant protein bands were of 13, 34, 44.5, 46, 80 and 84 kDa. The 32 kDa protein was found to be the immunodominant along with 25 kDa protein band in all the isolates. Thus 32 kDa protein band represented a type specific marker for the Asian HS isolates, so it might be a potent candidate antigen for a subunit HS vaccine and can be exploited in immunodiagnosis of HS. OmpA, a β-barrel ion channel protein, has been reported to have a direct role in bacterial adhesion. Homologs of this protein are important adhesins in Escherichia coli, Haemophillus influenza and other bacteria. Recombinant OmpA binds to bovine kidney cells and interacts with host extracellular molecules like heparin and fibronectin (Dabo et al., 2003). The ability of P. multocida to bind with host extracellular matrix protein has shown that the bacteria can adhere to fibronectin and collagen type IX. Proteins identified as possible adhesins include OmpA, Oma87, Pm1069 and iron related proteins, Tbp (Transferrin binding protein) and the putative TonB receptor HgbA (Dabo et al., 2005). The outer membrane protein A (OmpA) of P. multocida A:1 was cloned and sequenced by Dabo et al. (2003). Mice vaccinated with purified Omp28 (member of OmpA family) developed a significant antibody titre compared to the control but did not protect the animal from a homologous intraperitoneal bacterial challenge. Even though Omp28 is surface exposed and antigenic but it did not stimulate immunity (Gatto et al., 2002). Earlier studies on the P. multocida outer membrane showed that a 37kDa protein was among five identified as possible protective immunogens based on radioimmunoprecipitation results using protective immune rabbit sera and on their location in the outer membrane (Lu et al., 1988). Monoclonal antibodies raised against the 37kDa protein were able to passively protect mice against infection with P. multocida with strong protection afforded against homologous strains, and some limited protection against heterologous strains (Lu et al., 1991). A protein of similar molecular mass (39 kDa) was identified in the P. multocida A:3 strain P1059; its expression was in relation to the presence and amount of capsule present on the cell (Borrathybay et al., 2003b; Ali et al., 2004a). P. multocida can adhere and invade chicken embryo fibroblasts. Adherence of the organism was inhibited by both monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies raised against the 39 kDa protein (Borrathybay et al., 2003a; Al-haj Ali et al., 2004; Ali et al., 2004 a, b). The actual identity of 39 kDa protein was reported, but recently a 39 kDa protein which can stimulate cross-serotype protection was also isolated from outer membrane protein extracts of the same A:3 strain, P1059 (Rimler, 2001). This protein was identified as PlpB (Pasteurella lipoprotein B), using peptide mass fingerprinting (Tabatabai and Zehr, 2004) and is predicted to be an ABC transport protein required for the uptake of methionine into the cell (Merlin et al., 2002). Antibodies raised against major outer membrane proteins (OmpH) of P. multocida is provided some protection against the disease. Monoclonal antibodies specific for OmpH passively protected mice against P. multocida challenge (Marandi and Mittal, 1997) and vaccination with the native OmpH protein (not recombinant) elicited protective immunity in birds against homologous challenge (Luo et al., 1997). In addition, antibodies raised to an OmpH synthetic peptide, Cyclic-L2, provided partial protection in chickens against homologous challenge (Luo et al., 1999). OmpH had significant similarity in both primary and secondary structure with those of other serotypes. Antibodies raised against recombinant OmpH provided strong protection so it can be an useful vaccine candidate antigen for P. multocida. The immunoprotective efficacy of P. multocida (6:B) outer membrane proteins (OMPs) was examined by Basagoudanavar et al. (2006) and it was found that OMPs are important determinants of immunoprotection hence can serve as vaccine candidates against haemorrhagic septicaemia. 2.9 CLONING OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEINS Among the methods that have been developed for genetic manipulation; one of the most challenging task is the expression of gene into a heterologous system. With the advancement of recombinant DNA technology, a number of E. coli expression systems have been designed and proved to be efficient means for mass production of naturally scarce protein. Ruffolo and Adler (1996) have cloned and expressed an 87 kDa outer membrane antigen Oma 87 from P. multocida serotype A: causing fowl cholera. The sequence of this gene showed extensive similarity with D15 protective surface Ag of H. influenza. The expressed protein was localized predominantly in the membrane fraction. Antiserum raised against recombinant protein protected the animals against homologous challenge. The gene encoding major OMP of P. multocida X-73 has been identified and sequenced from a genomic library by Luo et al. (1997). Expression of ompH gene was performed in E. coli system using expression vector pQE30 and pQE32. Recombinant protein conferred immunity to chicken against homologous challenge. The gene was found to be distributed among 15 serotypes of P. multocida. The gene omp16, encoding a 16 kDa outer membrane protein, was amplified and cloned into a pBluescript SK (-) vector and sequenced by Goswami et al., (2004). Presence of this gene was reported among different serotypes of P. multocida and found to localize in a 6.0 kb Hind II of the P. multocida genome. Haemolysins or cytolysins are membrane-damaging agents which have been described as bacterial virulence factors due to their ability to lyse erythrocytes and other host cells, and therefore inducing a greater inflammatory response (Ruffolo et al., 2000). P. multocida was found to be haemolytic under anaerobic conditions. Gene ahpA is responsible for haemolysis of bovine and equine erythrocytes. The ahpA gene of P. multocida B:2 was cloned and sequenced by Rani et al. (2006). It was an inner membrane protein with two strong hydrophobic regions at the N and C terminals. 2.10 E. COLI EXPRESSION SYSTEM Expression of a functional protein depends upon correct transcription of the gene, efficient translation and in many cases post translational processing and targeting of the nascent polypeptide. Any fault in these steps may result in non expression of a gene. E. coli is used most commonly for expression of foreign genes. Large numbers of vectors which are compatible to E. coli system are available for high level expression of a desired gene. Availability of multiple cloning sites in the newer generation expression vectors make the task easy for cloning of gene in correct orientation and proper reading frame. Expression vectors like pQE, pGEX, pMAL and pCAL etc are available in which foreign genes are expressed as fusion proteins. E. coli system for direct expression and secretion has been developed and refined (Goeddel et al., 1990). Many proteins of biological interest are produced in very limited quantities in natural condition, thereby making it difficult to study those proteins having the property of conferring protection. To make a subunit vaccine, large quantities of antigens must be produced and purified. For this purpose bacterial systems are quite convenient and express antigens at very high levels. There are several bacterial expression systems that can be used, but E. coli is the most popular (Makrides et al., 1996; William et al., 1995). Bacterial systems are suitable for expressing vaccine antigens that do not require any post translational modification. Indeed E. coli has been used extensively for the expression of large number of genes at levels sufficient for structural biochemical analysis and even product development (Rosenberg et al., 1996). Several advantages of E. coli have ensured that it will remain valuable organism for high level production of recombinant protein (Olins and Lee, 1993). Higher expression of foreign protein in E. coli is deleterious to the host, resulting in decreased growth rate or even lysis of the cell. Thus it is essential that a tightly regulated, inducible promoter system be used to limit protein expression until the cells have grown to maximal density in culture. Mostly foreign proteins expressed at high levels in E. coli are in the form of insoluble inclusion bodies. This can preclude purification unless a chaotropic agent first solubilizes it. Some epitopes have strict conformational requirements that may be affected by treatment with a chaotropic agent. Thus exposure to such agent may affect the protective efficacy of the antigen. A vaccine antigen solubilized using a chaotropic agent may permanently lose its biological activity, but may still posses the epitope required to elicit a protective immune response. E. coli has been used to express antigens for enormous variety of vaccines. Many of these bacterial expressed recombinant antigens conferred protective immunity. These antigens include bacterial derived proteins, genetically modified toxins and virus derived peptides as products. 2.11 NEW APPROACHES OF VACCINE DEVELOPMENT Looking the present scenario of the available vaccines it is difficult to control the disease. To overcome from limitations of present available vaccines, several new approaches have been utilized. 2.11.1 Subunit vaccine Vaccines made from well defined components of microorganisms are called subunit vaccines. These vaccines can be based on peptides, proteins or polysaccharides that have been shown to contain protective epitopes. Many of the cell surface carbohydrates of pathogenic bacteria like capsular polysaccharides are important antigenic determinants for vaccine development. 2.11.2 Recombinant subunit vaccine A subunit vaccine that is produced using recombinant techniques is called a recombinant vaccine. These vaccines are created by utilizing bacteria or yeast to produce large quantities of a single viral or bacterial protein. This protein is then purified, injected into the patient, and the patient's immune system makes antibodies against the disease agent's protein, protecting the patient from natural disease (Stephen, 1998). Recombinant DNA technology allows controlled production of protein subunit vaccines in heterologous hosts. Such strategies have several advantages. Recombinant strategies further offer the possibility of delivery protein subunits with the help of live delivery systems, bacterial or viral or even as antigen encoding genes, so-called nucleic acid vaccines. 1. Recombinant technology begins with the isolation of a gene of interest. The gene is then inserted into a vector and cloned. A vector is a piece of DNA that is capable of independent growth; commonly used vectors are bacterial plasmids and viral phages. The gene of interest (foreign DNA) is integrated into the plasmid or phage, and this is referred to as recombinant DNA. 2. Before introducing the vector containing foreign DNA into the host cells to express the protein, it must be cloned. Cloning is necessary to produce numerous copies of the DNA since the initial supply is inadequate to insert into host cells. 3. Once the vector is isolated in large quantities, it can be introduced into the desired host cells such as mammalian, yeast, or special bacterial cells. The host cells will then synthesize the foreign protein from the recombinant DNA. When the cells are grown in vast quantities, the foreign or recombinant protein can be isolated and purified in large amounts. Table 2.2: Recombinant subunit vaccines and examples of their advantages (+) and drawbacks (-) Recombinant vaccine Advantages/drawbacks Protein immunogens + No risk of pathogenicity since pathogenic organism is not present the +Efficient production systems available Live delivery system - Multiple doses required + May induce both humoral and cellular responses Bacterial Viral Nucleic acid vaccines - Risk of reversion when using attenuated pathogens as carriers + Surface display of antigens possible +Mucosal administration possible +Efficient induction of cellular responses + No risk of pathogenicity +May induce both humoral and cellular responses -Variable immune responses -Inefficient transfection (Source: Stahl et al., 2000) Recent advances in immunology and protein engineering have allowed the design and production of recombinant subunit vaccines (Liljeqvist and Stahl., 1999). The epitopes recognized by neutralizing antibodies are usually found in just one or a few proteins present on the surface of the pathogenic organism. Isolation of the genes encoding such epitope-carrying protein immunogens and their expression in heterologous hosts form the basis of recombinant-subunit-vaccine development (Stahl et al., 2000). OmpH is a major antigenic outer membrane protein from P. multocida and has high immunogenicity in antibody production. Although the short fragment of recombinant OmpH has lower protective immunity while antibodies against full-length of recombinant OmpH appear to be protective in mice. Therefore, recombinant OmpH might be an useful vaccine candidate antigen (Lee et al., 2007). Leptospiral putative outer membrane proteins (OMPs) were cloned and expressed by Chang et al. (2007). Primary screening for immunoprotective potential was performed in hamsters challenged with an LD50 inoculum of low passage serovar Pomona. They found that rLp1454, rLp1118, and rMceII showed protection individually and synergistically against serovar Pomona infection and might be helpful in development of multicomponent vaccine for leptospirosis. Recombinant outer membrane proteins of V. parahaemolyticus zj2003, including OmpW, OmpV, OmpU and OmpK,were found to be immunogenic during in vivo infection (Mao et al., 2007). This was the first report of successful vaccination against V. parahaemolyticus with purified recombinant outer membrane proteins. Zhang et al. (2007) concluded that a multicomponent OMP antigen i.e. the fusion protein rOmpk-GAPDH could induce a higher frequency of immune effectors than a single OMP (r-Ompk or r-GAPDH). These results presented a good suggestion for the subunit vaccine design based on the OMPs of gram-negative pathogens. 2.11.2.1 Live delivery system Beside the possibility of producing recombinant protein immunogens in heterologous hosts, technologies to construct live viral and bacterial vaccine delivery vectors carrying foreign immunogens have been developed. Wang et al. (2007) evaluated the humoral and cellular immune responses of recombinant Mycobacterium bovis Bacillus Calmette-Guérin strains expressing the antigen ESAT-6 from Mycobacterium tuberculosis in BALB/c mice. In immunized mice, the IgG antibody titres, IFN-gamma level and splenocyte proliferation index of rBCG group were significantly higher than that of BCG group and therefore might be the better vaccine against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Zhou et al. (2007) found that recombinant adenovirus containing the major outer membrane protein gene of Chlamydophila psittaci might be a candidate vaccine against avian chlamydiosis. 2.11.2.2 Nucleic acid vaccines Nucleic acid vaccines constitute a new class of recombinant subunit vaccine, consisting of, for example, plasmid DNA containing the gene encoding the antigen of interest under the control of a strong mammalian promoter. Besides this, DNA vaccines are exceedingly potent in priming the immune response as evidenced by the generation of very high immune responses upon booster immunization with a low dose of a traditional vaccine expressing the same antigen (Feng et al., 2001). The antigen encoding gene will be expressed by the vaccine upon delivery of the plasmid DNA. DNA vaccines expressing three variola major (VARV) antigens (A30, B7 and F8) and their recombinant protein counterparts elicited high-titer, cross-reactive, VACV neutralizing antibody responses in mice (Sakhatskyy et al., 2007). 2.11.3 Aromatic mutant Other molecular approaches to vaccine development include the creation of attenuated strain by mutation of specific targets. Such attenuated strain would be used as live vaccines, which are usually more effective than killed whole cell subunit vaccines because they have the advantage of a natural route of entry into the host, which allows targeting of immunostimulatory factors to the same sites of the immune system that occur in the natural infection. Such mutants can be created by allelic exchange and further attenuated in mouse models. The aroA gene encodes 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate (EPSP) synthase, which is involved in the conversion of shikimic acid to chorismic acid, a common intermediate in the biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids. Mutation in the aroA gene creates a dependency for growth on aromatic compounds that are not available in the host, as this pathway is not operative in mammalian cells. This means that aroA mutants are capable of only limited replication before they are cleared from the host. As described by Homchampa et al. (1992, 1997) and Tabatabaei et al. (2002, 2007), attenuated aroA mutants of P. multocida serotypes A and B:2 causing fowl cholera and HS respectively, have been shown to provide protection against challenge in chickens (Scott et al., 1999) and mouse (Tabatabaei et al., 2002, 2007), respectively. On the other hand, HS is only one of a wide range of diseases caused by P. multocida. Live aroA mutant organisms may be of use as vaccines for other pasteurelloses, such as rabbit snuffle, fowl cholera and pneumonic form of bovine and ovine pasteurellosis. The production of bacterial ghosts is a new approach in non living vaccine technology and is based on the controlled expression of the PhiX174 derived lysis gene E. Bacterial ghosts are empty cells devoid of cytoplasmic and genomic material. Marchart et al. (2003) used Pasteurella ghosts for immunization of rabbits and mice. They reported that animals which received 1.15x 108 ghosts and a challenge dose of upto 60 cfu (LD90) showed 100% protection. Materials & Methods Chapter 3 Materials and Methods 3.1 BACTERIAL STRAINS Pasteurella multocida serotype B:2 (vaccine strain P52), obtained from Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izatnagar, U.P. India was used in this study and maintained in blood agar medium. It was routinely cultured in brain-heart infusion (BHI) broth. Escherichia coli DH5 used in the cloning experiments was purchased from Bangalore Genei and grown in Luria broth (LB). All the cultures were stored at 40C in their respective agar media in slants. Their glycerol stocks were maintained at -200C. 3.3 CHEMICALS All the chemicals and solvents used in the study were purchased from Himedia, Sisco Research Laboratory, Bangalore Genei and Sigma. 3.4 GLASSWARE AND PLASTICWARES All the glassware used in the study were of Borosil. Microfuge tubes and micropipette tips were purchased from Axygen, Tarsons etc. 3.5 EQUIPMENTS USED Name Make Refrigerated centrifuge Remi Rotatory shaker Remi pH meter Sartorious 3.6 Electrophoresis assembly Bangalore Genei Electrophoresis Power supply Bangalore Genei Electronic balance Sartorious Laminar bench (MAC) Macro scientific works Thermocycler Biometra Water bath Biometra REVIVAL AND CHARACTERIZATION OF P. multocida P52 STRAIN The culture of P. multocida P52 was revived on Brain Heart Infusion (BHI: Hi Media Ltd., India) broth and blood agar and the identity of the culture was tested by Gram’s staining, growth on McConkey (Hi Media, India) agar, oxidase and indole reaction. 3.7 PATHOGENICITY TEST OF THE ORGANISM Approximately 0.5ml of 10-5 dilution of 18 hour old culture of P52 was injected intraperitoneally into three healthy mice. All of them died within 36-38 hours of inoculation. Post mortem was conducted and the organisms were reisolated in pure culture from heart blood and spleen of the dead animals. 3.8 P. multocida (B:2) SPECIFIC PCR Type specific P. multocida (B:2) PCR was performed to amplify the unique gene sequences in P. multocida B:2 serotype by using KTSP61KTT 72 primers as per method described by Townsand et al., (1998). Primer1. KTSP 61: 5’ATCCGCTAACACACTCTC 3’ Primer2. KTT 72: 5’AGGCTCGTTTGGATTATGAAG 3’ Reaction mixture for PCR Total volume 25μl Assay buffer (10X) with 1.5mM MgCl2 2.5 μl (1X) dNTPs 2μl (200μmol) Template DNA 5μl (40 ng) Primers 2 μl + 2 μl (20pmol each) Taq polymerase 1.0U Total volume was maintained with sterilized ultra pure water. Amplification was done using the following programme Temperature Time Initial denaturation 94 oC 5 min Denaturation 94 oC 1 min Anealing 55 oC 1 min Extension 72 oC 1 min 72 oC 10 min 30 cycles from step 2 Final extension 3.8.1 Electrophoresis And Determination Of PCR Product Five μl of amplified product was mixed with 1 μl of 6X loading dye and loaded onto 1.5% agarose gel using 1X TAE buffer. Sample was run at 5volts/cm for one hour and gel was observed under ultraviolet light to visualize the bands. The band size was determined by comparing with standard molecular weight marker. Gel was photographed by gel documentation system (AlphaImager 2200 Documentation and Analysis System, Alpha Innotech Corporation, USA). 3.9 1. ISOLATION OF BACTERIAL WHOLE CELL PROTEINS Single colony of bacterial culture was inoculated in 1ml of broth and grown overnight. 2. One ml from overnight grown culture was inoculated in 1 litre of broth and again grown for 12 hours. 3. Culture was centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 10 minutes and pellet were washed thrice in PBS. 4. Pellet were then suspended in 10mM HEPES buffer and sonicated for 10 minutes in ice. 5. Cell suspension was centrifuged for 30 minutes at 10,000 Xg. 6. The clear supernatant was collected and filtered through .45μm filter paper. 7. The filtrate was used as sonicated antigen for raising hyperimmune serum. 8. Protein concentration was estimated by Lowry’s method (1951). 3.10 PURIFICATION OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEINS (Choi-Kim et al., 1991) 1. For the purification of OMPs sonicated antigen was centrifuged at 1,00,000 x g for 60 minutes at 4oC in an ultracentrifuge. 2. The pellet obtained were resuspended in 2 ml of 2 % (w/v) sodium lauryl sarcosine in 10 mM HEPES buffer (pH 7.4) and incubated at room temperature for 1 hour. 3. The mixture was centrifuged at 1,00,000 x g for 1 hour at 40C and pellet were washed twice with distilled water. 4. The pellet containing purified OMPs were dissolved in PBS. 5. Obtained proteins (OMPs) were used for analysis of polypeptides and immunoblotting. 3.11 SODIUM DODECYL SULPHATE-POLYACRYLAMIDE ELECTROPHORESIS (SDS-PAGE) GEL Whole cell protein and outer membrane proteins of P. multocida P52 were analyzed by SDS-PAGE using the method of Laemmli (1970). The vertical slab gel electrophoresis apparatus (Atto, Japan) with glass plates of 14 x 14 cm and spacer of 1.5 mm thickness was used for performing SDS-PAGE by discontinous buffer system using 12% resolving gel and 5% stacking gel. 3.11.1 Gel preparation The vertical slab gel unit was assembled in casting mode with 1.5mm spacers. The resolving gel solution was prepared according to the given composition. The solution was mixed well and poured into the sandwich to a level of 4 cm from the top, then 3 ml of distilled water was gently added along the uniform gel surface after polymerization. The water layer was poured off. Stacking gel was prepared according to the described composition and overlayed on the resolving gel. After putting the comb into the sandwich, the gel was allowed to polymerize. 3.11.2 Sample Preparation Fifty μl of the sample was mixed with equal volume of 2X sample buffer and boiled for 5 minutes in a water bath. 3.11.3 Loading and running the gel The comb was slowly removed from the gel after polymerization. The wells were filled with electrode buffer. The samples and markers protein were underplayed in each well. The lower and upper chambers of the tank were also filled with electrode buffer. The electrophoresis unit was connected to the power pack and the gel was run initially at 80V and then at 120V till the tracking dye reached to the bottom of the gel. 3.11.4 Staining and Destaining The gel mould was carefully disassembled after completion of the run and gel was stained with coomassie brilliant blue for two hours. Later, the gel was destained in destaining solution with intermitant shaking. Finally gel was rinsed in distilled water and scanned. 3.11.5 Determination of molecular weight of ploypeptides After destaining of gel by coomassie brilliant blue R, the molecular weight of polypeptides were determined by the molecular weight analysis tool of the gel documentation system. The molecular weight of protein was determined by standard protein molecular weight markers (Fermantas). 3.12 RAISING OF HYPER IMMUNE SERUM Hyper immune serum against sonicated antigen of P. multocida P52 was raised in New Zealand white rabbit in three doses as described in Table 3.1. 1. For the initial dose antigen was emulsified with equal volume of Fruend’s complete adjuvant and injected in rabbit. Booster doses of antigen were given along with Freund’s incomplete adjuvant. 2. The first booster dose was given on day 10 and repeated thrice at 10 days interval. 3. After 7 days of last booster, rabbit was bled and serum was separated and stored at -20 0C. Table 3.1: Immunization Schedule Sl. Days of Amount of Volume of No immunization antigen (μg) antigen (μl) Volume of Adjuvant (μl) Total Mode of injection 1000 Subcutaneous, Intradermal, Footpad 1 0 500 500 500(complete fruend’s adjuvant) 2 10 250 250 500(incomplete fruend’s adjuvant) 500 Subcutaneous, Intradermal, Footpad 3 20 250 250 500(incomplete fruend’s adjuvant) 500 Subcutaneous, Intradermal, Footpad 3.13 AGAR GEL PRECIPITATION TEST (AGPT) Agar gel precipitation test was performed according to the method of Ouchterlony (1949) to detect antibodies against P. multocida in hyper immune sera raised in rabbits. Agarose (1%) was prepared in PBS, pH 7.4 in boiling water bath. The molten agarose was poured on Petri dish and allowed to solidify. One central and four peripheral wells of 3mm diameter at a distance of 3mm were punched and sealed with molten agarose .The central well was filled with sonicated antigen of P.multocida and peripheral wells were charged with hyper immune sera raised against it. 3.14 IDENTIFICATION OF IMMUNOGENIC PROTEINS BY WESTERN BLOTTING Polypeptides separated on 12% SDS-PAGE using discontinuous buffer system were transferred on nitrocellulose membrane by semi-dry method of electroblotting (Electrophoretic transfer unit, Atto Corporation, Japan) as per the method of Towbin et al. (1979) with minor modifications. Five sheets of thick Whatman filter paper (Hi Media, India) were soaked in transfer buffer and placed on centre of graphite anode electrode plate. The distilled water soaked NCM (Nitrocellulose membrane) was then placed on the top of filter papers. The gel was placed on the membrane followed by stacking of five sheets of filter papers soaked in transfer buffer. The assembled transfer stack was covered with cathode plate and current of 0.8 mA/cm2 was applied for 1 hour. To assess the quality of transfer, prestained marker (Bangalore Genei, India) was used. The electrophoretic blot was kept in blocking buffer overnight at 4 oC. After washing with wash buffer four times for 5 minutes each, the membrane was incubated at 37 oC for 1 hour with hyperimmune serum against whole cell antigen diluted 1:50 in blocking buffer. After washing 4 times with washing buffer each for 5 minutes, the blot was again incubated at 37 oC for 1 hour with anti- rabbit horseradish peroxidase conjugate at a dilution of 1:2000 in blocking buffer. The blot as described above, was transferred to freshly prepared 50 ml of substrate solution containing diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride and 6 μl of 30% (v/v) hydrogen peroxide for few minutes. The reaction was stopped by washing with distilled water. After drying, the membrane was stored in a dark place. 3.15 CLONING OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEIN GENES 3.15.1 Extraction of Genomic DNA Genomic DNA of Pasteurella multocida P52 was isolated by C-TAB method (Wilson, 1987). 1. Single colony of P. multocida P52 was inoculated in 2ml of broth and grown overnight at 37 oC. 2. From the overnight culture 25 μl was inoculated in 25 ml of broth and grown overnight at 37 oC. 3. Cells were harvested at 10,000rpm for 10min. at 4 oC. 4. Pellet were resuspended in lysis buffer containing 2ml TE (10mm Tris, 1mM EDTA), 400μl of sodium dodecyl sulphate (10%w/v) and 10μl of proteinase K (20mg/ml) and mixed properly by rapid pipetting. 5. Mixture was incubated at 370C for 3 hours. 6. 400μl of 5M NaCl was added in cell lysate and after adding 300μl of CTAB (7.5%) the tubes were kept at 600C in a water bath for 10 min. 7. Same volume of chloroform was added in tubes, mixed well and the tubes were centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 15 minutes. 8. Twenty μg/ml of RNase was added in supernatant and incubated at 370C for 30 minutes. 9. Equal volume of phenol: chloroform to the above reaction mixture was added, mixed by vortexing and centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 15 minutes. 10. Aqueous layer was separated and equal volume of Chloroform: Isoamylalcohol (24: 1) was added. It was mixed thoroughly and centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 10 min. 11. In the aqueous layer, double volume of chilled ethanol and 1/10 volume of 3M sodium acetate were added and was kept overnight at -200C. 12. Mixture was centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 15 minutes at 4 oC. 13. Supernatant was discarded and the pellet was dissolved in 100μl TE (10mM Tris and 1mM EDTA, pH 8.0). 3.15.1.1 Quantification of DNA The absorbance of DNA samples were measured on DU-640 spectrophotometer at 260 and 280 nm. The concentration of DNA was estimated by using the formula: Concentration of DNA (μg/ml) = OD260 x 50 x dilution factor 3.15.2 PCR Based Amplification of outer membrane protein genes For amplification of Omp87 gene: Oligonucleotide primers were designed from published sequence of P. multocida serotype A:1 (Ruffolo and Adler, 1996) with linkers at 5’ end having BamHI and HindIII restriction endonucleases sites. The sequences of primers were as follows: Primer 1. 5’ CCGGATCCATGAAAAAACTTTTAATTGC 3’ Primer 2. 5’ CAAGCTTTTAGAACGTCCCACCAATGCTG 3’ For amplification of Omp34 gene Primers were designed from OmpH gene of Pasteurella multocida serotype D. The sequences of primers were as follows: Primer 1. 5’ TTAGAAGTGTACGCGTAAACCAA 3’ Primer 2. 5’ GCAACAGTTTACAATCAAGACG 3’ Both the primers were synthesized by Sigma trends Bio-products Pvt. Ltd. Reaction mixture for PCR reaction Total volume 25μl Assay buffer (10X) with 1.5mM MgCl2 2.5 μl dNTPs(each) 2μl Template DNA 5μl (40 ng) Primers 2 μl + 2 μl (20pmole each) Taq polymerase 1.0U Total volume was maintained with sterilized ultra pure water. Amplification was done using the following programme Temperature Time Initial denaturation 94 oC 5 min Denaturation 94 oC 1 min Anealing 51 oC 1 min Extension 72 oC 1 min 72 oC 10 min 30 cycles from step 2 Final extension 3.15.2.1 Electrophoresis and determination of PCR product Five μl of amplified product were mixed with 1 μl of 6X loading dye and loaded on to 1.5% agarose gel in 1X TAE buffer and sample was run at 5volts/cm for one hour. Gel was observed under ultraviolet light to visualize the bands. The size of amplified DNA was determined by comparing with photographed by standard gel molecular weight marker and were documentation system (AlphaImager 2200 Documentation and Analysis System, Alpha Innotech Corporation, USA). 3.15.3 Purification of amplified products Amplified products were analyzed on 1.5% agarose gel and eluted from gel using QIA quick gel extraction kit (Qiagen) as per the manufacturer’s recommendations. 1. Band of interest from gel was excised with a clean, sharp scalpel. 2. Three volumes of buffer QG was added and mixture was incubated at 50oC for 10 minutes untill the gel slice has been completely dissolved. 3. DNA/agarose solution was applied to a minelute column assembled in 2 ml collection tube and centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 10 minutes. 4. Flow through was discarded and 750 μl of PE buffer was added to the column and centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 10 minutes. 5. Column was centrifuged for an additional 1 minute at 13,000 rpm. 6. Column was placed in 1.5ml microcentrifuge tube and 30 μl of EB (10mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.5) was used for elution of DNA. 3.15.4 Molecular Cloning Cloning of the purified PCR products were carried out using pGEM-T Easy vector (Promega, USA) as per the manufacturer’s recommendations (Fig 3.1). Various steps and procedures used for cloning are as follows: Fig 3.1: Map of pGEM-T Easy vector 3.15.4.1 Ligation Concentration of amplified gene eluted from agarose gel was measured by spectrophotometer at 260 nm and 280 nm. Amount of interest was calculated using the following formula and mixed with vector. Vector to insert ratio Size of PCR product (bp) 50 ng 3000 bp (size of vector) Reaction mixture Test Control(+) 2X rapid ligation buffer 5 μl 5 μl pGEM-T Easy Vector (50ng) 1 μl 1 μl PCR product 3 μl _ _ 2 μl T4 DNA ligase(3 Weiss units/ μl) 1 μl 1 μl Deionized water (to make up 10 μl) 10μl 10 μl Control insert DNA Ligation product was incubated at 40C for overnight and transformed in competent cells 3.15.4.2 Preparation of Competent cells Competent cells were prepared by the method described by Sambrook et al., (1989). The method involved following steps: 1. Single colony of E.coli DH5 α was inoculated in 5ml of L.B. broth and incubated at 370C overnight in an orbital shaker. 2. From the overnight grown culture, 50 μl cells were inoculated into 5 ml fresh LB broth and allowed to grow with gentle shaking in the orbital shaker at 200 rpm. After 2.5 to 3 hours of the incubation, when the culture was in the log phase of growth cycle and the cell density was enough to give an OD of 0.6 at A600 (absorbance at 600 nm),the culture was cooled on ice. 3. The cooled cells were centrifuged at 8,500 rpm for 10 minutes at 40C for pelleting. 4. Supernatant was decanted and pellet was resuspended in 750 μl ice-cold 0.1M CaCl2. 5. Cells were again centrifuged at 8,500 rpm for 10 minutes at 40C. 6. Supernatant was decanted and cell pellet was again resuspended in 200 μl of ice cold 0.1M CaCl2 and incubated in ice for 1 hour. Prepared competent cells were stored at -200C till further use or used for fresh transformation. 3.15.4.3 Preparation of LB agar plates with Amp/IPTG/X-Gal Before transformation, LB agar plates were prepared containing ampicillin (Promega, (HiMedia, USA) India), and IPTG X-Gal (Isopropyl-β-D thiogalactoside) (5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl- β-D- galactopyranoside) (Promega, USA). LB agar medium was prepared, autoclaved and allowed to cool to 50 0C. The media was poured into petri plates and allowed to solidify. Then 100 μl of 100mM IPTG and 20 μl of 50 mg/ml X-gal were spread over the surface of a plate and allowed to absorb for 30 minutes at 37 0C prior to use. 3.10.8.4 Transformation 1. Total 10 μl of ligated mixture was added in 200 μl of competent cells. 2. The reaction mixture was incubated in ice (40C) for 30 minutes. 3. Heat shock was given to the mixture at 420C for 90 seconds in a swirling water bath and immediately returned to 40C for 5 minutes. 4. One ml of LB for the survival of competent cells was then added, mixed and incubated at 370C for 2 hours. 5. The mixture was then centrifuged at 7,500 rpm for 8 minutes and supernatant was decanted leaving about 100 μl in the tubes. 6. The pellet was then resuspended in 100μl and total contents were spreaded on LB plates containing 100μg/ml ampicillin with X-Gal and IPTG. The plates were incubated at 370C for 24 hrs and colonies were observed. Control was also processed in the same way but it was without any DNA and plated on both Amp+ and Amp- LB plates. 3.15.4.5 Screening of Recombinant Clones The recombinant clones were screened by PCR and confirmed by restriction enzyme analysis of the desired insert. 3.15.4.6 Colony PCR The recombinant colonies were screened by PCR using the same set of primers to detect the presence of desired insert as described in section of PCR by cell-lysis method. Some recombinant colonies were selected from the LB agar plate containing ampicillin, IPTG and X-gal. 1. Single isolated white colonies were picked up from the plates and inoculated in 5 ml LB broth with 100 μg/ml ampicillin and incubated overnight at 370C. 2. Pellet was obtained by centrifugation of culture at 8000 rpm for 10 minutes. 3. Pellet was resuspended in 100μl of sterilized triple distilled water. 4. Then the tubes were boiled at 1000C for 10 minutes and chilled immediately in ice. 5. The tubes were centrifuged at 5000 rpm for 10 minutes to remove cell debris. 6. From the supernatant 5μl was used as template for PCR reaction. 3.15.4.7 Isolation of Plasmid DNA The plasmid DNA were isolated from PCR positive clones and also from non recombinant clone i.e. from blue colony ( acted as negative control). An improved alkali lysis method for miniprep plasmid isolation was used to isolate the plasmid DNA (Sambrook et al., 1989). 1. A single colony was inoculated in 5 ml of LB broth containing 100μg/ml of ampicillin and cells were grown overnight at 370C. 2. 1.5 ml culture was pelleted in eppendorf at 10,000 rpm for 10 minutes at 4 oC. 3. The pellet was suspended in 100μl of ice cold solution I, vortexed well and kept at room temperature for 5 minutes. 4. Freshly prepared lysis solution I (200μl) was added, mixed by vortexing and kept at room temperature for 5 minutes. 5. Solution III (150μl) was added and mixed by inverting the tube. 6. The tubes were incubated on ice and then centrifuged at 10,000 rpm for 10 min. 7. Supernatant was transferred in fresh eppendorf and equal volume of Phenol: Chloroform: isoamyl alcohol (25:24:1) was added and mixed well. The tubes then centrifuged at 12,000 rpm for 10 min. 8. The upper aqueous phase was transferred to a fresh tube. 9. Double volume of ice cold ethanol was added, supernatant and contents were mixed by inversion and incubated at -200C for 2 hrs. 10. The contents were centrifuged at 14,000 rpm to pellet the plasmid(s) 40C for 10 min. and supernatant is poured off. 11. The pellet was washed with 70% ethanol. 12. Pellet was dried and suspended in 50μl TE containing RNase A (20 μg/ml) and tubes were kept at 37 oC for RNase treatment and then stored at -20 oC. 3.15.4.7.1 Agarose gel electrophoresis of plasmid DNA Five μl plasmid DNA was mixed with 1 μl of 6X loading dye and subjected to electrophoresis for 2.5 hrs in 1% agarose gel at 5volt/cm. Gels were stained in ethidium bromide(0.5 μg/ml) and photographed by gel documentation system. 3.15.4.8 Restriction Enzyme Digestion To confirm the insert in clones, plasmid were digested with Not I enzyme. The digestion was carried out in 10 μl of reaction mixture containing the following: Plasmid 7.5 μl Assay buffer 1.5 μl Not I 1 μl The eppendorf was given a brief spin and incubated at 37 0C for 3 hrs. The digested mixture was loaded on 0.8% gel along with molecular weight marker and visualized on transilluminator. 3.16 SEQUENCING AND HOMOLOGY SEARCH The cloned PCR products in pGEMT-Easy vector were subjected to sequencing using Universal T7 and SP6 primers at the DBT Sponsored National DNA sequencing facility of Department of Biochemistry, University of Delhi, South Campus, New Delhi. The observed data for nucleotide sequence of omp34 gene and omp87 gene were compared with the reported sequence of ompH gene of P. multocida CU vaccine strain serotype A: 3,4 and omp87 gene of P. multocida serotype A:1 respectively using Laser gene DNASTAR software. Analysis of both the sequences at amino acid level were also analyzed by same software. Homologies of the sequences obtained after sequencing were searched on the website www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov by using BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) and FASTA programme. 3.16.1 Sequence Alignment Nucleotides sequences of outer membrane protein genes of P. multocida P52 studied were analyzed and amino acid sequences were deduced by using ‘EditSeq’ Programme of Lasergene (DNASTAR Inc, USA) software. Both nucleotide and amino acid sequences were aligned separately by using ClustalW method of ‘MegAlign’ programme. For comparison, nucleotide sequences of known serotypes were included in the study. Sequences for omp34 were retrieved from EMBL databank. Serotype B:2 accession number- EU162755, serotype 3,4- U52213.1, serotype 10- U52207, serotype 12- U52209, serotype 11U52208, serotype D- AY864815.1, serotype 9- U52206, serotype D:4AY603962, serotype 15- U52212, serotype 14- U52211, serotype 1- AF416986, serotype A1- U50907, serotype 7- U52204, serotype 6- U52203, serotype 13-U52210 were used for sequence alignment and further in silico analysis study. 3.16.2 Phylogenetic Analysis Aligned nucleotide sequences were subjected to phylogenetic analysis using ‘MegAlign’ programme of Lasergene software to derive the ancestral relationship among the sequences of different serotypes. 3.17 STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEINS Amino acid sequences deduced from the nucleotide sequence of outer membrane proteins were further used for its structural analysis. Primary and secondary structure analysis of the proteins were done by using different online server,viz., ProtParam (ExPASy Server: ProtParam (Gasteiger et al., 2005) Pfam (http://www.pfam.janelia.org/cgi.bin/) and PDBsum (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/pubsum), respectively. Results Chapter 4 Results 4.1 REVIVAL AND CHARACTERIZATION P. multocida P52 STRAIN Freeze dried culture of P. multocida P52 was revived on Brain Heart Infusion (BHI) broth and blood agar. Characteristic nonhaemolytic colonies were obtained which were gram-negative cocobacilli that showed oxidase positive and indole negative reactions. 4.2 PATHOGENICITY TEST OF THE ORGANISM Intraperitoneally inoculated mice with 0.5ml of 10-5 dilution of 18h old broth culture of P52 died within 24-48 hours. The re-isolated colonies showed characteristic of P. multocida. 4.3 P. multocida (B:2) SPECIFIC PCR Under the standard PCR conditions, as described in Materials and Methods B: 2 specific PCR was done using specific primers and P. multocida P52 DNA as template. Five μl of amplified product was analyzed by electrophoresis in 1% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. The size of amplicon was compared with DNA ladder and found to be of approximately 620 bp (Fig 1). 4.4 PURIFICATION OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEINS The P. multocida P52 outer membrane proteins were obtained by the method as described by Choi-kim et al., (1991). Fig (2) demonstrated the presence of eight Omps bands in P. multocida P52. The molecular weights of the major polypeptide bands were in the range of 16 to 87 kDa. The major bands were of 16, 27, 30, 34, 37, 44, 68 and 87 kDa. 4.5 AGAR GEL IMMUNODIFFUSION TEST Immunization of rabbits with whole cell antigen of P. multocida P52 strain apparently stimulated the production of antiserum. A positive immunodiffusion test was observed when this hyperimmune sera was tested with whole cell antigen (Fig 3). It produced three precipitin lines in all three sets indicating the presence of at least three major immunogens in sonicated extract of P. multocida. 4.6 ANALYSIS OF IMMUNOGENIC POLYPEPTIDES BY WESTERN BLOT Potential immunogens of P. multocida P52 were identified by electroblot immunoassay. Immunoblotting was performed using the hyperimmune serum raised against the whole cell antigen in order to detect immunogenic proteins in outer membrane proteins. Polypeptides separated on 12% SDS-PAGE were transferred to nitrocellulose membrane by semi-dry system. Presence of seven polypeptides of 16, 30, 34, 37, 44, 68 and 87 kDa size was reported showing reaction with antiserum (Fig 4). 4.7 CLONING OF OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEIN GENES In this study we approached PCR cloning method. On the basis of available database of Omp genes in other serotypes of P. multocida, primers were designed by using DNASTAR software. 4.7.1 Genomic DNA extraction Genomic DNA was extracted from overnight grown culture of P. multocida P52 and visualized on 0.8% agarose gel (Fig5). For quantification of DNA, absorbance was taken at 260 and 280nm. The yield of genomic DNA was 1.8 which confirms the purity of the isolated DNA sample. Agarose gel electrophoresis of the isolated DNA revealed that DNA was relatively intact and without RNA. 4.7.2 PCR Amplification of Outer Membrane Genes: Under the standard PCR conditions, as described in Materials and Methods Omp gene(s) were amplified using specific primers and P. multocida P52 DNA as template. Five μl of amplified product was analyzed by electrophoresis on 1% agarose gel stained with ethidium bromide. The size of amplicon was compared with DNA ladder. Amplified products of Omp87 and Omp34 were 2373bp and 942bp respectively (Fig 6 and 7). 4.7.3 Elution, Ligation and Transformation Both the amplicons (amplified products of 2372 and 942) were eluted from agarose gel and ligated individually in pGEM-T vector by keeping for overnight at 40 and subsequently transformed in E.coli DH5 α cells. Transformants were plated on LB media containing 100 μg/ml ampicillin and IPTG/X-Gal and incubated at 37 0C for 24 hrs. Competent cells were also plated on Amp+ and Amp- plates, which served as positive and negative control respectively. Competent cells did not appear on Amp+ plates but grew on Amp- plates when incubated for 24 hrs. 4.7.4 Screening of recombinants After incubation, recombinant and non-recombinant colonies appeared as white and blue respectively (Fig 8 and 9). A total of 20 white colonies were picked up from plates and inoculated in LB medium with 100 μg/ml ampicillin and were grown overnight 4.7.5 PCR based screening of recombinant clones Recombinant colonies were screened for the amplification of the desired inserts by PCR using the same primer pair that was used to amplify the gene. Plasmid DNA(s) were isolated from recombinant clones (white colonies) and subjected to polymerase chain reaction. A negative control (plasmid from blue colony) was also used to check any non specific amplification. Single amplified product of the expected size were found only in positive samples (Fig 10 and 11). Plasmid DNA was isolated from each of the PCR positive colonies grown in LB ampicillin broth for 12-16 hrs by alkaline lysis method (Fig 12). 4.7.6 Insert release of both the genes PCR positive clones were further subjected to RE digestion for the confirmation of the correct size of the inserts. The recombinant plasmids were subjected to single digestion with NotI enzyme at 37 0C for overnight and visualized on 1.5% agarose along with DNA ladder. Insert of 2373 bp was released on digestion of recombinant plasmid of omp87 with NotI (Fig 13). Restriction analysis showed a fragment of approximate 1 kb and vector size of 3 kb. Undigested recombinant plasmid showed a band of 4 kb, while non recombinant (control) plasmid was showing a single band of 3 kb (Fig 14). These results confirmed the insertion of the desired omp genes into the vector. 4.8 SEQUENCING OF OMP GENES The cloned omp genes were sequenced at the DNA sequencing facility of University of Delhi, South campus, New Delhi. Sequencing results revealed complete open reading frame (ORF) of 2121bp and 942bp for omp87 and 34 kDa respectively. Sequences were analysed in ‘Editseq’ programme (DNASTAR) for further analysis. The nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of both the genes are shown in appendix (Annexure I). 4.8.1 Sequence analysis of omp87 gene Cloning and sequencing of omp87 gene revealed the length of sequence to be 2121 bp. The sequence analysis of coding region of omp87 gene showed GC content of 40-46%. Nucleotide sequence of P. multocida P52 showed 94.8% similarity with that of P. multocida serotype A:1 strain while the homology at amino acid level was 95.2%. The results of data alignment are presented as residue substitutions of ClustalW in Table 4.1. Fig 16 : Alignment of nucleotide sequence of omp87 10 1 1 20 30 40 A T G A A A A A A C T T T T A A T T G C G A G C T T A T T A T T T G G G T C A A omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 50 60 70 80 41 1 C C A C T G C A T T T G C T G C G C C G T T T G T A G T G A A A G A C A T T C G omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 81 1 T G T T G A C G G T G T T C A A G C A G G T A C A G A A G G A A G T G T A T T A omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 121 1 G C T A C G C T T C C T G T T C G T G T T G G G C A G C G A G C A A C A G A T A omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 161 1 A C G A T A T T G C T A A T G T G G T A C G A A A A T T A T T C C T G A G T G G omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 90 130 170 210 100 140 180 220 110 150 190 230 120 160 200 240 201 1 G C A A T A T G A T G A T G T G A A A G C A A G T C G C G A A G G G A A T A C T omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 241 1 T T A G T T G T G A C A G T C A T G C C T A A A C C T G T T A T T T C A A A C G omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - A T G C C T A A A C C T G T T A T T T C A A A C G omp87HSB2 281 26 T C G T G A T T G T C G G T A A T A A A T C G A T T C C T G A T G A A G C A A T omp87FCA1 T C G T G A T T G A C G G T A A T A A A T C G A T T C C T G A T G A A G C A A T omp87HSB2 321 66 T A A A C A A A A C T T A G A T G C G A A T G G C T T T A A A G T T G G T G A T omp87FCA1 T A A A C A A A A C T T A G A T G C G A A T G G C T T T A A A G T C G G T G A T omp87HSB2 250 290 330 370 260 300 340 380 270 310 350 390 280 320 360 400 361 106 G T A T T A A A C C G T G C T A A A T T A G A A G A A T T C C G T A A A G G G A omp87FCA1 G T A T T A A A C C G T G C T A A A T T A G A A G A A T T T C G G A A A G G G A omp87HSB2 401 146 T T G T T G A A C A C T A C A A C A G T G T C G G T C G C T A T A A T G C G A A omp87FCA1 T T A T C G A A C A C T A C A A T A G T G T C G G T C G C T A T A A T G C G A A omp87HSB2 410 420 430 440 450 441 186 460 470 480 A G T T G A T G C T A T C G T G A A T A C A T T A C C A A A T A A T A G T G C A omp87FCA1 G G T A G A G G C T A T C G T G A A T A C A C T A C C A A A T A A T A G C G C G omp87HSB2 490 500 510 520 481 226 G A A A T T A A A A T T C A A A T T A A T G A A G A T G A T G T G G C A C T C T omp87FCA1 G A A A T T A A A A T T C A A A T T A A T G A A G A T G A T G T T G C A C T A T omp87HSB2 521 266 T T A A A G A A A T T A C G T T T G A A G G T A A C G A A G C G T T T A G T A G omp87FCA1 T T A A A G A A A T T A T T T T T G A A G G T A A T C A A G C A T T T A G C A G omp87HSB2 561 306 C G G A A A A T T A G C C G A T C A G A T G G A G T T A C A A A C C G A T T C G omp87FCA1 C A G T A A A T T A G A A G A T C A A A T G G A G C T T C A A A C A G A T G C A omp87HSB2 601 346 T G G T G G A A A C T G T T T G G C A A T A A A T T T G A T C A A A C C C A A T omp87FCA1 T G G T G G A A A T T G T T T G G T A A C A A A T T T G A T C A A A C C C A A T omp87HSB2 530 570 610 650 540 580 620 660 550 590 630 670 560 600 640 680 641 386 T C A A T A A A G A T T T A G A A A C C T T A C G T A G C T A T T A T T T A G A omp87FCA1 T C A A T A A A G A T T T A G A G A C C T T A C G T A G C T A T T A T T T A G A omp87HSB2 681 426 T C G T G G T T A C G C G C A A T T T C A G A T T C T T G A T A C G G A T G T C omp87FCA1 T C G T G G T T A C G C G C A A T T C C A A A T T T T A G A T A C T G A T A T C omp87HSB2 721 466 A A A T T A A G T G A T G A T A A A A A A G A A C C G T G T C T T A T - - - - - omp87FCA1 A A A T T A A G T G A T G A T A A A A A A G A A G C G C G T G T C A T T A T T A omp87HSB2 756 506 A A G T G A A - G A A G G T G A C T T A T A T A C G G T G A A A - A C G C G C G omp87FCA1 A A G T G A A A G A A G G T G A C T T A T A T A C A G T G A A A T G C G C G C G omp87HSB2 690 730 770 810 700 740 780 820 710 750 790 830 720 760 800 840 794 546 T A T C T G G G G G G A T G T G G G G T G G C A T G T C A G C A G A A C T T G C omp87FCA1 T A T T C T G G G G G A T G T G G G - T G G C A T G T C A G C A G A A C T T G C omp87HSB2 834 585 C C C G A T T T T A G A G A C G A T T C A A T T G A A T G G T C T T T T C C G T omp87FCA1 T C C G A T T T T A G A T A C G A T T C A A C T A A A T G G T C T T T T C C G T omp87HSB2 850 860 870 880 850 834 585 860 870 880 C C C G A T T T T A G A G A C G A T T C A A T T G A A T G G T C T T T T C C G T omp87FCA1 T C C G A T T T T A G A T A C G A T T C A A C T A A A T G G T C T T T T C C G T omp87HSB2 890 900 910 920 874 625 C G C A C A A G T G T A T T G G A A G T A G A A C A A C G C A A T A A A T C G A omp87FCA1 C G C G C A A A C G T A T T G G A A G T T G A A C A A C G C A T T A A A T C G A omp87HSB2 914 665 A G T T A G G T G A A A G A G G T T A T G C A A C T G C G C A A G T C A A T G T omp87FCA1 A G T T A G G T G A A A G A G G T T A T G C G A C T G C G C A A G T C A A T G T omp87HSB2 954 705 T C A C C C G A C A T T T G A C G A A C A A G A T A A A A C G A T T T C G T T A omp87FCA1 T C A C C C G A C A T T T G A C G A A C A A G A T A A A A C G A T T T C G T T A omp87HSB2 994 745 G A T T T T A T T G T T G A A G C A G G C A A A A G T T A T A C G G T T C G C C omp87FCA1 G A T T T T A T T G T T G A A G C A G G C A A A A G T T A T A C G G T T C G C C omp87HSB2 930 970 1010 1050 940 980 1020 1060 950 990 1030 1070 960 1000 1040 1080 1034 A A A T T C G T T T T G A A G G C A A T A C A A G T A G T G C A G A T A G C A C omp87FCA1 785 A A A T T C G T T T T G A A G G C A A T A C A A G T A G T G C A G A T A G C A C omp87HSB2 1090 1100 1110 1120 1074 C T T G C G T C A G G A A A T G C G T C A A C A A G A A G G C G C T T G G T T A omp87FCA1 825 C T T A C G T C A G G A A A T G C G T C A A C A A G A A G G C G C T T G G C T A omp87HSB2 1130 1140 1150 1160 1114 T C C T C G G A G T T G G T T G A G T T A G G T A A A T T A C G T T T A G A T C omp87FCA1 865 T C C T C G G A G T T G G T T G A G T T A G G T A A A T T A C G T T T A G A T C omp87HSB2 1170 1180 1190 1200 1154 G T A C G G G T T A C T T T G A A A G C G T A G A A A C C A A A A C A G A A G C omp87FCA1 905 G T A C G G G G T T C T T T G A G A G T G T A G A A A C C A A A A C A G A A G C omp87HSB2 1210 1220 1230 1240 1194 T A T C C C G G G T T C T G A T C A A G T C G A T G T G A T T T A T A A G G T C omp87FCA1 945 T A T C C C G G G T T C T G A T C A A G T C G A T G T G A T T T A T A A A G T C omp87HSB2 1250 1260 1270 1280 1234 A A A G A G C G T A A T A C G G G T A G C A T T A A C T T T G G T A T T G G T T omp87FCA1 985 A A A G A G C G T A A T A C G G G T A G C A T T A A C T T T G G T A T T G G T T omp87HSB2 1290 1300 1310 1320 1274 A T G G T A C A G A A A G T G G G T T G A G T T A C C A A G C C A G T A T T A A omp87FCA1 1025 A T G G T A C A G A A A G T G G G T T G A G C T A C C A A G C C A G T A T T A A omp87HSB2 1290 1300 1310 1320 1274 A T G G T A C A G A A A G T G G G T T G A G T T A C C A A G C C A G T A T T A A omp87FCA1 1025 A T G G T A C A G A A A G T G G G T T G A G C T A C C A A G C C A G T A T T A A omp87HSB2 1330 1340 1350 1360 1314 A C A G G A T A A C T T C T T A G G A A T G G G A T C T T C C A T T A G T T T A omp87FCA1 1065 A C A G G A T A A C T T C T T A G G A A T G G G A T C T T C T A T T A G T T T A omp87HSB2 1370 1380 1390 1400 1354 G G T G G G A C G C G T A A T G A T T A C G G T A C T A C G G T G A A T C T C G omp87FCA1 1105 G G T G G G A C G C G T A A T G A C T A C G G T A C T A C A A T C A A T C T T G omp87HSB2 1410 1420 1430 1440 1394 G T T A T A A T G A G C C G T A C T T T A C G A A A G A T G G T G T G A G C C T omp87FCA1 1145 G T T A T A A T G A G C C G T A C T T T A C C A A A G A T G G T G T G A G C C T omp87HSB2 1450 1460 1470 1480 1434 C G G T G G T A A T G T T T C C T T T G A A G A A T A T G A T A G T T C A A A A omp87FCA1 1185 C G G T G G C A A T G T T T T C T T T G A A G A A T A T G A T A G T T C C A A A omp87HSB2 1490 1500 1510 1520 1474 A G T A A T A C C T C T G C G G G C T A T G G A C G G A C T A G C T A T G G T G omp87FCA1 1225 A G T A A T A C C T C T G C G G C C T A T G G A C G G A C T A G C T A T G G T G omp87HSB2 1530 1540 1550 1560 1514 G T A A T T T A A C A C T A G G C T T C C C A G T G A A T G A G A A T A A C T C omp87FCA1 1265 G T A A T T T G A C A C T A G G C T T T C C G G T G A A T G A G A A T A A C T C omp87HSB2 1570 1580 1590 1600 1554 A T A T T A T C T T G G T G T A G G C T A T A C G T A T A A T A A A T T G A A G omp87FCA1 1305 A T A T T A T C T T G G T G T G G G C T A T A C G T A T A A T A A A T T G A A G omp87HSB2 1610 1620 1630 1640 1594 A A T A T C G C G C C G G A A T A T A A T C G T G A T T T A T A T C G C C A A T omp87FCA1 1345 A A T A T C G C G C C G G A A T A T A A T C G T G A T T T A T A T C G C C A A T omp87HSB2 1650 1660 1670 1680 1634 C G A T G A A A T A T A A T G A T T C T T G G A C C T T T A A A T C G C A C G A omp87FCA1 1385 C A A T G A A A T A T A A T G A T T C T T G G A C C T T T A A A T C G C A C G A omp87HSB2 1690 1700 1710 1720 1674 T T T T G A T T T G T C T T T T G G T T G G A A T T A T A A C A G T C T T A A C omp87FCA1 1425 T T T T G A T T T G T C T T T T G G T T G G A A T T A T A A C A G C C T T A A C omp87HSB2 1730 1740 1750 1760 1714 C G C G G C T A T T T C C C A A C C A A A G G G G T A C G T G C C A A T A T T G omp87FCA1 1465 C G T G G C T A T T T C C C A A C T A A A G G G G T A C G T G C C A A T A T T G omp87HSB2 1770 1780 1790 1800 1754 G A G G A C G A G T G A C C A T T C C G G G C T C A G A T A A T A A A T A T T A omp87FCA1 1505 G T G G A C G A G T G A C C A T T C C G G G C T C A G A C A A T A A A T A T T A omp87HSB2 1810 1820 1830 1840 1794 T A A A C T C A A T G C A G A A G C A C A A G G G T T C T A T C C G T T A G A T omp87FCA1 1545 T A A A C T C A A T G C A G A A G C A C A A G G G T T C T A T C C G T T A G A T omp87HSB2 1850 1860 1870 1880 1834 C G T G A A C A T G G T T G G G T A C T T T C A A G C C G T A T T A G T G C C T omp87FCA1 1585 C G T G A A C A T G G T T G G G T A C T T T C A A G C C G T A T T A G T G C C T omp87HSB2 1890 1900 1910 1920 1874 C T T T T G C G G A T G G A T T T A G C G G T A A G C G T T T G C C G T T C T A omp87FCA1 1625 C T T T T G C T G A T G G A T T T G G T G G T A A G C G T T T G C C G T T C T A omp87HSB2 1930 1940 1950 1960 1914 T C A A T A T T A T A G C G C A G G C G G T A T C G G G A G T T T A C G T G G C omp87FCA1 1665 T C A A T A T T A T A G C G C A G G C G G T A T C G G G A G T T T A C G T G G C omp87HSB2 1970 1980 1990 2000 1954 T T T G C C T A T G G T G C G A T T G G A C C A A A T G C A A T T T A T C G C A omp87FCA1 1705 T T T G C C T A T G G T G C G A T T G G A C C A A A T G C A A T T T A T C G T A omp87HSB2 2010 2020 2030 2040 1994 C A C G T C A A T G T C C T G A C A G C T A T T G T T T A G T C A G T A G T G A omp87FCA1 1745 C A C G T C A A T G T C C T G A C A G C T A T T G T T T A G T C A G T A G C G A omp87HSB2 2050 2060 2070 2080 2034 T G T G A T T G G G G G G A A T G C A A T G G T C A C C G C C A G T A C C G A A omp87FCA1 1785 T G T G A T T G G G G G G A A T G C A A T G G T C A C C G C C A G T A C C G A A omp87HSB2 2090 2100 2110 2120 2074 C T C A T T G T T C C A A C A C C A T T T G T C G C A G A T A A A A A T C A A A omp87FCA1 1825 C T C A T T G T C C C A A C A C C A T T T G T C G C A G A T A A A A A T C A A A omp87HSB2 2130 2140 2150 2160 2114 A C T C A G T G A G A A C T T C T C T G T T T G T G G A T G C G G C T A G T G T omp87FCA1 1865 A C T C A G T A A G A A C T T C T T T G T T T G T G G A T G C C G C A A G T G T omp87HSB2 2170 2180 2190 2200 2154 G T G G A A T A C G C G T T G G A A A G C A G A G G A T A A A G C A A A A T T T omp87FCA1 1905 G T G G A A T A C G C G T T G G A A A G C A G A G G A T A A A G C A A A A T T T omp87HSB2 2210 2220 2230 2240 2194 G C A A A A T T A A A T G T G C C C G A T T A C A G T G A T C C A A G T C G C G omp87FCA1 1945 G C A A A A T T G A A T G T G C C A G A T T A C A G T G A C C C A A G T C G C G omp87HSB2 2250 2260 2270 2280 2234 T T C G T G C T T C A G C T G G G G T A G C G C T T C A A T G G C A A T C G C C omp87FCA1 1985 T T C G T G C T T C A G C T G G G G T G G C G C T T C A A T G G C A A T C G C C omp87HSB2 2290 2300 2310 2320 2274 A A T T G G A C C G T T A G T G T T C T C T T A T G C G A A A C C C C T T A A G omp87FCA1 2025 A A T T G G A C C G T T G G T G T T C T C T T A T G C G A A A C C T C T T A A G omp87HSB2 2330 2340 2350 2360 2314 A A A T A C C A A G G C G A T G A A A T T G A G C A G T T C C A A T T C A G C A omp87FCA1 2065 A A A T A C C A A G G C G A T G A A A T T G A G C A G T T C C A A T T C A G C A omp87HSB2 2370 2354 T T G G T G G G A C G T T C T A A 2105 T T G G T G G G A C G T T C T A A omp87FCA1 omp87HSB2 Fig 17 : Alignment of amino acid sequence of omp87 10 1 1 20 30 40 M K K L L I A S L L F G S T T A F A A P F V V K D I R V D G V Q A G T E G S V L omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 50 60 70 80 41 1 A T L P V R V G Q R A T D N D I A N V V R K L F L S G Q Y D D V K A S R E G N T omp87FCA1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp87HSB2 81 1 L V V T V M P K P V I S N V V I V G N K S I P D E A I K Q N L D A N G F K V G D omp87FCA1 - - - - - M P K P V I S N V V I D G N K S I P D E A I K Q N L D A N G F K V G D omp87HSB2 90 130 100 140 110 150 120 160 121 V L N R A K L E E F R K G I V E H Y N S V G R Y N A K V D A I V N T L P N N S A omp87FCA1 36 V L N R A K L E E F R K G I I E H Y N S V G R Y N A K V E A I V N T L P N N S A omp87HSB2 170 180 190 200 161 E I K I Q I N E D D V A L F K E I T F E G N E A F S S G K L A D Q M E L Q T D S omp87FCA1 76 E I K I Q I N E D D V A L F K E I I F E G N Q A F S S S K L E D Q M E L Q T D A omp87HSB2 210 220 230 240 201 W W K L F G N K F D Q T Q F N K D L E T L R S Y Y L D R G Y A Q F Q I L D T D V omp87FCA1 116 W W K L F G N K F D Q T Q F N K D L E T L R S Y Y L D R G Y A Q F Q I L D T D I omp87HSB2 250 260 270 280 241 K L S D D K K E P C L I S - - E E G D L Y T V K T R V S G G M W G G M S A E L A omp87FCA1 156 K L S D D K K E A R V I I K V K E G D L Y T V K C A R I L G D V G G M S A E L A omp87HSB2 290 300 310 320 279 P I L E T I Q L N G L F R R T S V L E V E Q R N K S K L G E R G Y A T A Q V N V omp87FCA1 196 P I L D T I Q L N G L F R R A N V L E V E Q R I K S K L G E R G Y A T A Q V N V omp87HSB2 330 340 350 360 319 H P T F D E Q D K T I S L D F I V E A G K S Y T V R Q I R F E G N T S S A D S T omp87FCA1 236 H P T F D E Q D K T I S L D F I V E A G K S Y T V R Q I R F E G N T S S A D S T omp87HSB2 370 380 390 400 359 L R Q E M R Q Q E G A W L S S E L V E L G K L R L D R T G Y F E S V E T K T E A omp87FCA1 276 L R Q E M R Q Q E G A W L S S E L V E L G K L R L D R T G F F E S V E T K T E A omp87HSB2 410 420 430 440 399 I P G S D Q V D V I Y K V K E R N T G S I N F G I G Y G T E S G L S Y Q A S I K omp87FCA1 316 I P G S D Q V D V I Y K V K E R N T G S I N F G I G Y G T E S G L S Y Q A S I K omp87HSB2 450 460 470 480 439 Q D N F L G M G S S I S L G G T R N D Y G T T V N L G Y N E P Y F T K D G V S L omp87FCA1 356 Q D N F L G M G S S I S L G G T R N D Y G T T I N L G Y N E P Y F T K D G V S L omp87HSB2 490 500 510 520 479 G G N V S F E E Y D S S K S N T S A G Y G R T S Y G G N L T L G F P V N E N N S omp87FCA1 396 G G N V F F E E Y D S S K S N T S A A Y G R T S Y G G N L T L G F P V N E N N S omp87HSB2 530 540 550 560 519 Y Y L G V G Y T Y N K L K N I A P E Y N R D L Y R Q S M K Y N D S W T F K S H D omp87FCA1 436 Y Y L G V G Y T Y N K L K N I A P E Y N R D L Y R Q S M K Y N D S W T F K S H D omp87HSB2 570 580 590 600 559 F D L S F G W N Y N S L N R G Y F P T K G V R A N I G G R V T I P G S D N K Y Y omp87FCA1 476 F D L S F G W N Y N S L N R G Y F P T K G V R A N I G G R V T I P G S D N K Y Y omp87HSB2 610 620 630 640 599 K L N A E A Q G F Y P L D R E H G W V L S S R I S A S F A D G F S G K R L P F Y omp87FCA1 516 K L N A E A Q G F Y P L D R E H G W V L S S R I S A S F A D G F G G K R L P F Y omp87HSB2 650 660 670 680 639 Q Y Y S A G G I G S L R G F A Y G A I G P N A I Y R T R Q C P D S Y C L V S S D omp87FCA1 556 Q Y Y S A G G I G S L R G F A Y G A I G P N A I Y R T R Q C P D S Y C L V S S D omp87HSB2 690 700 710 720 679 V I G G N A M V T A S T E L I V P T P F V A D K N Q N S V R T S L F V D A A S V omp87FCA1 596 V I G G N A M V T A S T E L I V P T P F V A D K N Q N S V R T S L F V D A A S V omp87HSB2 730 740 750 760 719 W N T R W K A E D K A K F A K L N V P D Y S D P S R V R A S A G V A L Q W Q S P omp87FCA1 636 W N T R W K A E D K A K F A K L N V P D Y S D P S R V R A S A G V A L Q W Q S P omp87HSB2 770 780 790 759 I G P L V F S Y A K P L K K Y Q G D E I E Q F Q F S I G G T F . 676 I G P L V F S Y A K P L K K Y Q G D E I E Q F Q F S I G G T F . omp87FCA1 omp87HSB2 Table 4.1: Residue substitutions Accurate, IUB) A A of Untitled C G T 6 30 10 7 42 C 6 G 30 7 T 10 42 ClustalW (Slow/ 10 10 4.8.2 Sequence analysis of omp 34 gene Clones showing positive results after plasmid profiling and restriction digestion were sequenced. Sequencing data revealed the length of this gene to be 942 nucleotides with termination at stop codon 940TAA942. The sequence analysis of coding region of omp gene revealed GC content of 40-45%. The predicted primary protein is composed of 313 amino acids without signal sequence. The mature protein had molecular mass of 33.7 kDa. Further sequence comparison of omp nucleotide sequence of P. multocida P52 showed 98.3% similarity while the homology at amino acid level was 97.5%. The results of this data alignment are presented as residue substitutions of ClustalW in Table 4.2. Table 4.2: Residue substitutions Accurate, IUB) A A of Untitled C G T 2 8 1 0 6 C 2 G 8 0 T 1 6 0 0 ClustalW (Slow/ Fig 18 : Alignment of nucleotide sequence of omp34 10 20 30 40 1 1 G C A A C A G T T T A C A A T C A A G A C G G T A C A A A A G T T G A T G T A A ompHCUA3 G C A A C A G T T T A C A A T C A A G A C G G T A C A A A A G T T G A T G T A A omp34HSB2 41 41 A T G G T T C T G T A C G T T T A A T C C T T A A A A A A G A A A A A A A T G A ompHCUA3 A T G G T T C T G T A C G T T T A A T C C T T A A A A A A G A A A A A A A T G A omp34HSB2 81 81 G C G C G G T G A T T T A G T G G A T A A C G G T T C A C G C G T T T C T T T C ompHCUA3 G C G C G G T G A T T T A G T G G A T A A C G G T T C A C G C G T T T C T T T C omp34HSB2 50 90 130 60 100 140 70 110 150 80 120 160 121 A A A G C A T C T C A T G A C T T A G G C G A A G G T T T A A G C G C A T T A G ompHCUA3 121 A A A G C A T C T C A T G A C T T A G G C G A A G G T T T A A G C G C A T T A G omp34HSB2 170 180 190 200 161 C T T A C G C A G A A C T T C G T T T C A G C A C A A A A G T T A A A A A A A C ompHCUA3 161 C T T A C G C A G A A C T T C G T T T C A G C A C A A A A G T T A A A A A A A C omp34HSB2 210 220 230 240 201 A G T T A A A G A A G G T C C T A A C C A A G T A G A A C G C A C A T A T G A A ompHCUA3 201 A G T T A A A G A A G G T C C T A G C C A A G T - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - omp34HSB2 250 260 270 280 241 G T T G A G C G T A T C G G T A A T G A T G T T C A C G T A A A A C G T C T T T ompHCUA3 225 - - T G A G C G T A T C G G T A A T G A T G T T C A C G T A A A A C G T C T T T omp34HSB2 290 300 310 320 281 A T G C G G G T T T C G C G T A T G A A G G T T T A G G A A C A T T A A C T T T ompHCUA3 263 A T G C G G G T T T C G C G T A T G A A G G T T T A G G A A C A T T A A C T T T omp34HSB2 330 340 350 360 321 C G G T A A C C A A T T A A C T A T C G G T G A T G A T G T T G G T G T G T C T ompHCUA3 303 C G G T A A C C A A T T A A C T A T C G G T G A T G A T G T T G G T G T G T C T omp34HSB2 370 380 390 400 361 G A C T A C A C T T A C T T C T T A G G T G G T A T C A A C A A T C T T C T T T ompHCUA3 343 G A C T A C A C T T A C T T C T T A G G T G G T A T C A A C A A T C T T C T T T omp34HSB2 410 420 430 440 401 C T A G C G G T G A A A A A G C A A T T A A C T T T A A A T C T G C A G A A T T ompHCUA3 383 C T A G C G G T G A A A A A G C A A T T A A C T T T A A A T C T G C A G A A T T omp34HSB2 450 460 470 480 441 C A A C G G T T T C A C A T T T G G T G G T G C G T A T G T G T T C T C T G C G ompHCUA3 423 C A A C G G T T T C A C A T T T G G T G G T G C G T A T G T G T T C T C T G C G omp34HSB2 490 500 510 520 481 G A T G C A G A C A A A C A A G C A C C A C G T G A T G G T C G C G G T T T C G ompHCUA3 463 G A T G C A G A C A A A C A A G C A C C A C G T G A T G G T C G C G G T T T C G omp34HSB2 530 540 550 560 521 T T G T A G C A G G T T T A T A T A A C A G A A A A A T G G G C G A T G T T G G ompHCUA3 503 T T G T A G C A G G T T T A T A T A A C A G A A A A A T G G G C G A T G T T G G omp34HSB2 570 580 590 600 561 T T T C G C A C T T G A A G C A G G T T A T A G C C A A A A A T A T G T A A C A ompHCUA3 543 T T T C G C A C T T G A A G C G G G T T A T A G C C A A A A A T A T G T A A C A omp34HSB2 610 620 630 640 601 G C A G C A G C T A A A C A A G A A A A A G A A A A A G C C T T T A T G G T T G ompHCUA3 583 G T A G C G - - - - A - - - - - A A C A A G A A A A A G C C T T T A T G G T T G omp34HSB2 650 660 670 680 641 G T A C T G A A T T A T C A T A T G C T G G T T T A G C A C T T G G T G T T G A ompHCUA3 614 G T A C T G A A T T A T C A T A C G C T G G T T T A G C A C T T G G T G T T G A omp34HSB2 690 700 710 720 681 C T A C G C A C A A T C T A A A G T G A C T A A C G T A G A A G G T A A A A A A ompHCUA3 654 C T A T G C A C A A T C T A A A G T G A C T A A C G T A G A A G G T A A A A A A omp34HSB2 730 740 750 760 721 C G C G C A C T T G A A G T A G G T T T A A A C T A T G A C A T T A A T G A C A ompHCUA3 694 C G C G C A C T T G A A G T G G G T T T A A A C T A T G A T A T T A A T G A C A omp34HSB2 770 780 790 800 761 A A G C A A A A G T T T A C A C T G A C T T G A T T T G G G C A A A A G A A G G ompHCUA3 734 A A G C G A A A G T T T A C A C T G A C T T G A T T T G G G C A A A A G G A G G omp34HSB2 810 820 830 840 801 T C C A A A A G G T G C G A C T A C A A G A G A T C G T T C T A T C A T C T T A ompHCUA3 774 T C C A A A A G G T G C G A C T A C A A G A G A T C G T T C T A T C A T C T T A omp34HSB2 850 860 870 880 841 G G T G C G G G C T A C A A G C T T C A C A A A C A A G T T G A A A C C T T T G ompHCUA3 814 G G T G C G G G C T A C A A G C T T C A C A A A C A A G T T G A A A C C T T T G omp34HSB2 890 900 910 920 881 T T G A A G G T G G C T G G G G C A G A G A G A A A G A T G C T A A T G G C G T ompHCUA3 854 T T G A A G G T G G C T G G G G C A G A G A G A A A G A T G C T A A T G G C G T omp34HSB2 930 940 950 960 921 A A C A A C A A A A G A T A A C A A A G T T G G T G T T G G T T T A C G C G T A ompHCUA3 894 A A C A A C A A A A G G C A A T G T C G T T G G T G T T G G T T T A C G C G T A omp34HSB2 961 C A C T T C T A A 934 C A C T T C T A A ompHCUA3 omp34HSB2 Fig 19 : Alignment of amino acid sequence of omp34 10 20 30 40 1 1 A T V Y N Q D G T K V D V N G S V R L I L K K E K N E R G D L V D N G S R V S F ompHCUA3 A T V Y N Q D G T K V D V N G S V R L I L K K E K N E R G D L V D N G S R V S F omp34HSB2 41 41 K A S H D L G E G L S A L A Y A E L R F S T K V K K T V K E G P N Q V E R T Y E ompHCUA3 K A S H D L G E G L S A L A Y A E L R F S T K V K K T V K E G P S Q V E R - - - omp34HSB2 81 78 V E R I G N D V H V K R L Y A G F A Y E G L G T L T F G N Q L T I G D D V G V S ompHCUA3 - - - I G N D V H V K R L Y A G F A Y E G L G T L T F G N Q L T I G D D V G V S omp34HSB2 50 90 130 60 100 140 70 110 150 80 120 160 121 D Y T Y F L G G I N N L L S S G E K A I N F K S A E F N G F T F G G A Y V F S A ompHCUA3 115 D Y T Y F L G G I N N L L S S G E K A I N F K S A E F N G F T F G G A Y V F S A omp34HSB2 170 180 190 200 161 D A D K Q A P R D G R G F V V A G L Y N R K M G D V G F A L E A G Y S Q K Y V T ompHCUA3 155 D A D K Q A P R D G R G F V V A G L Y N R K M G D V G F A L E A G Y S Q K Y V T omp34HSB2 210 220 230 240 201 A A A K Q E K E K A F M V G T E L S Y A G L A L G V D Y A Q S K V T N V E G K K ompHCUA3 195 V A K - - - Q E K A F M V G T E L S Y A G L A L G V D Y A Q S K V T N V E G K K omp34HSB2 250 260 270 280 241 R A L E V G L N Y D I N D K A K V Y T D L I W A K E G P K G A T T R D R S I I L ompHCUA3 232 R A L E V G L N Y D I N D K A K V Y T D L I W A K G G P K G A T T R D R S I I L omp34HSB2 290 300 310 320 281 G A G Y K L H K Q V E T F V E G G W G R E K D A N G V T T K D N K V G V G L R V ompHCUA3 272 G A G Y K L H K Q V E T F V E G G W G R E K D A N G V T T K G N V V G V G L R V omp34HSB2 321 H F . 312 H F . ompHCUA3 omp34HSB2 4.9 SEQUENCE ALIGNMENT 4.9.1 Homology search The Omp34 gene sequences of B:2 serotype obtained in this study along with the published sequences of P.multocida serotypes were aligned by ClustalW method. Sequences of all serotypes were retrieved from EMBL sequence database. The nucleotide and amino acid alignments of different isolates/strains are shown in fig 16 and 17 respectively. The pairwise nucleotide sequence identity/divergence was also analyzed using laser gene software (DNASTAR). 4.9.2 Phylogenetic analysis The phylogenetic relationship among all the isolates was studied on the basis of their nucleotide as well as amino acid sequences which revealed slightly different results. Phylogenetic tree was constructed using omp gene sequences downloaded from the NCBI database in order to compare the relationship of P52 with other serotypes. The phylogenetic analysis based on nucleotide sequences revealed 5 major clusters. Serotype 1 showed an entirely different lineage from the starting (Fig 18). Serotype B2 found in major cluster had more number of the isolates and was close to serotype 3, 4. Serotype 6, 7 and 13 formed a different cluster. Serotype 10 and 12 were found to be 100% similar. The pairwise identity/divergence (Table 4.3) was also done using DNASTAR. P. multocida serotype B:2 revealed 98.2% homology with Serotype11 SerotypeD SerotypeB2 SerotypeA34 SerotypeD4 Serotype15 Serotype9 serotype10 Serotype12 Serotype7 Serotype6 Serotype13 Serotype14 SerotypeA1 Serotype1 18.8 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 Nucleotide Substitutions (x100) 4 Fig. 20 : Nucleotide sequences based phylogenetic tree 2 0 Table 4.3 : Pairwise nucleotide sequernce identity/ divergences serotype 3,4and only 72.2% with serotype 1. P52 showed 88.3% similarity with serotype 10 and 11 and 83% with serotypes 13, 14 and 15. 4.10 OUTER MEMBRANE PROTEIN ANALYSIS Analysis of outer membrane proteins were done by using computational biology. Amino acid sequences were deduced from the nucleotide sequences and imported to the ExPAsy server (http://www.expasy.org/tool/) for primary structure analysis, Pfam (http://www.pfam.janelia.org/cgi.bin/) for functional domain and protein family study and PDBsum server (http://www. ebi.ac.uk/pubsum) for secondary structure prediction and analysis. For the prediction of transmembrane helix TMpred server was used. In silico translation and primary structure of the outer membrane protein were done using on line bioinformatics tools (ExPASy Server: ProtParam, Gasteiger et al., (2005). Theoretical pI, Aliphatic index and Grand average of hydropathicity (GRAVY) of the omp proteins of P. multocida P52 are given in table 4.4. Table 4.4: Summary of primary structure of omp proteins S.No. Amino Mol. weight Theoritical Aliphatic Charge GRAVY acid (kDa) pI Index Omp34 313 33.760 9.16 80.64 +6.59 .0.318 Omp87 790 87.57 5.94 79.97 -3.46 -0.387 The instability index of omp34 and 87 were computed to be 13.93 and 30.11 respectively which classified both the proteins as stable. The half-life of omp34 was estimated to be 4.4 hours (mammalian reticulocytes, in vitro), >20 hours (yeast, in vivo), >10 hours (in Escherichia coli, in vivo). Information on primary structure supported the possibility of expression of omp gene in E. coli. The details of the results are given in Annexure II. Analysis of Pfam results showed that the protein belong to Pfam A family. One major functional domain i.e. porin-1 was found in the omp34 sequence and six domains i.e. five surface antigen variable number repeats and one bacterial surface antigen were found in omp87 sequence by trusted matches. The detailed results of the study are given in the table 4.5. Table 4.5: Details of conserved domains of omp proteins Omp 34 Omp 87 Domain Porin_1 Start 6 End 313 Surf Ag VNR 21 88 Surf Ag VNR 89 169 Surf Ag VNR 172 258 Surf Ag VNR 261 340 Surf Ag VNR 343 416 Bac surface Ag 442 790 The Pfam study also showed more domains other than these domains based on potential matches of the sequences. Omp34 showed three domains i.e. Opacity, Transposase 11 and porin_1 and omp87 showed four domains i.e. Bacillus PapR, two POTRA2 and Autotransporter. The details of the results are given in table 4.6 and in annexure Table 4.6: Showing the domains based in potential matches. Domain Start End Opacity 211 313 Porin_1 7 52 Tranposase 11 218 284 Porin_1 269 313 Bacillus PapR 1 10 POTRA 2 21 43 POTRA 2 343 370 Autotransporter 495 532 Omp 34 Omp87 A total of five and ten transmembrane helices were found in omp34 and omp87 respectively. Only scores above 500 are considered significant. There is no helix formed in omp34 having score above 500 so the details of the results of omp 87 are given in table 4.7. Table 4.7: Prediction of transmembrane helix Omp87 From To Inside to outside 4 23 644 664 4 23 640 656 675 695 Outside to inside Discussion Chapter 5 Discussion Haemorrhagic septicaemia accounts for the largest proportion of mortality in cattle and buffaloes in India. Although several vaccines are used to control the disease, yet occurrence of the disease in many regions of the country has been reported. It has always been a challenge for the researcher to improve the existing vaccines, while overcoming the drawbacks of existing vaccines. At present, two types of vaccines against HS in use. The first type are killed whole cells (bacterins) and the second type are live attenuated vaccines. Killed whole cells stimulate protection only against P. multocida strains of the same serotype and only for short periods. The most effective bacterin is the oil adjuvant- one dose provides protection for 9-12 months; so it should be administered annually. The oil adjuvant vaccine has not been popular because of difficulty in syringing and occasional adverse local tissue reactions. To overcome from these problems there is an urgent need to search a conserved immunogenic protein as vaccine candidate. Outer membrane proteins of P. multocida are reported to be immunogenic and protective (Srivastava, 1998, Basagoudanavar et al., 2006). Some of the major outer membrane proteins like porins are reported to be highly immunogenic. These are pore forming outer membrane proteins and possess beta barrel structure having extracellular, transmembrane and intracellular domain. They are conserved in gram-negative bacteria showing high homology in primary amino acid sequence and secondary structure (Jeanteur et al., 1991). They form large channels allowing the diffusion of hydrophilic molecules into periplasmic space. They are strong immunogen and have been demonstrated to induce protective immunity in animal models against gram-negative bacterial infections (Luo et al., 1999). The outer membrane proteins of P. multocida P52 were isolated by the method described by Choi-Kim et al. (1991). The organism was disrupted by sonication and large particles were removed by centrifugation at low speed. The OMPs were separated into detergent insoluble and detergent soluble fractions. Sonicated antigen was used to induce antibody production. Antiserum raised against whole cell protein was used for agar gel precipitation test and in western blot analysis. It was possible to identify immunodominant outer membrane protein(s) and recombinant clones containing specific omp gene. According to Confer et al. (1996) the detergent (sodium lauryl sacosinate) insoluble fraction was almost identical with other membrane fraction purified by sucrose gradient. Vasfi Marandi and Mittal (1997) also reported the presence of outer membrane proteins in detergent insoluble fraction. SDS-PAGE analysis of OMP preparation of P. multocida P52 strain revealed the presence of eight polypeptide bands. The molecular weight of these polypeptides varied between 16 kDa to 97 kDa. With little difference, Pati et al. (1996) reported ten polypeptides bands of molecular weight 25 to 88 kDa of the same preparation. Kedrak and Opacka (2002) reported protein bands of 22 to 86 kDa in the OMP profiles of bovine strains (serotype B:2). The polypeptides of 31, 34 and 37 kDa molecular weights gave prominent bands on SDS-PAGE indicating that the same were synthesized in abundance corroborating the observations made by Tomer et al. (2002). Present results are in close agreement with the results of other workers with minor differences. Wasnik (1998) and Tomer et al. (2002) detected 13 and 20 polypeptidess bands respectively in profiles of outer membrane proteins. Anshu et al. (2005) revealed the presence of 11 protein fractions with two major OMPs of 32 and 35 kDa in capsular type B isolates. Arora et al. (2007) have reported a homogenous outer membrane profile of 17 different P. multocida isolates of bovine origin comprising 23 polypeptides ranging in MW from 13 to 94 kDa. On the basis of band thickness and stain intensity 32kDa protein appeared to be the major protein followed by 25 and 28 kDa. Apart from this, other significant protein bands observed were 13, 34, 44.5, 46, 80 and 84 kDa. They also considered that 32kDa protein band represented a type specific marker for the Asian HS isolates so it might be act as a candidate antigen for a subunit HS vaccine and can be exploited in immunodiagnosis of HS. Immunization of rabbits with whole cell antigen of P. multocida P52 strain apparently stimulated the production of antiserum. When this hyperimmune sera was tested with whole cell antigen using immunodiffusion test, it showed positive results. It produced three precipitin lines in all three sets indicating the presence of at least three major immunogens in sonicated extract of P. multocida. The results of western blot profiles of major immunogens indicated that all the major protein bands appeared immunogenic; however 34 kDa protein was found to be most immunodominant among them. In the present study, seven immunodominant outer membrane proteins of 87, 68, 44, 37, 34, 31 and 16 kDa molecular weights were identified. The results differed little from those reported by Pati et al. (1996) who encountered faint signals of only three outer membrane proteins of 44, 37, and 33 kDa reacting to hyperimmune sera. According to Arora et al. (2007), 32 kDa protein band was found to be immunodominant along with 25 kDa in all the P. multocida isolates of bovine origin. The original objective of this study was to isolate and characterize the genes encoding immunopotent outer membrane proteins of P. multocida B:2 P52 strain. Although, about eight (polypeptide) bands of outer membrane proteins were resolved on SDS-PAGE, all these peptides were not equally immunopotent and reacted differently on immunoblotting. With previous observations, the large size 87 kDa outer membrane protein was imagined as potential immunogen. It was found to react strongly on western blot with antisera raised against sonicated antigen. The results strengthened the hypothesis that 87 kDa OMP was an immunodominant antigen and might serve as potent immunogen in vaccine preparation. Proteins of 87 and 34 kDa were found to be immunodominant antigens. For further study we have cloned genes encoding outer membrane proteins of 87 and 34 kDa using PCR based techniques. PCR techniques have already been employed for cloning of ompH gene of P. multocida A:1 by Luo et al., (1997). The distribution of Omp genes among different serotypes of P. multocida has been reported. A 16 kDa Omp gene was found to be present in all the serotypes of P. multocida (Goswami et al., 2004). For the amplification of omp87 gene primers were designed from the available sequence of P. multocida serotype A:1 (Ruffolo and Adler, 1996). Restriction endonucleases sites for BamHI and HindIII were incorporated into the primer specific 5’ and 3’ end of coding strand. These two enzymes were selected because of lack of restriction sites for these two enzymes inside the omp87 gene. Incorporation of restriction sites facilitated directional cloning of the gene which avoided orientation problem. The major immunodominant protein in several strains of P. multocida has been reported to show general properties of other bacterial porins. We assumed that P. multocida P52 major outer membrane protein with a molecular mass of 34kDa was a porin. This protein also showed to have inherent properties to be expressed in vivo at a very high level because of its promoter. Bacterial porins genes are sometimes difficult to clone in E. coli, because of their lethal effect on host cells (Luo et al., 1997). This is due to the fact that whole omp34 gene posses signal peptide at its Nterminal and after expression in E. coli it translocates the protein to E. coli membrane that may causing osmotic imbalance and ultimately cell lysis. Keeping the above view in our mind, we have designed primer excluding the signal sequence. For the amplification of omp34 gene primers were designed from the available sequence of ompH gene of P. multocida CU vaccine strain of serotype A:3,4 causing fowl cholera. Genomic DNA was isolated from P. multocida P52 and quantified by taking reading at 260 and 280nm. Ratio between the O.D. at two wavelengths, provide an estimate of purity of the nucleic acid. Pure preparation of DNA and RNA has O.D. of 1.8 and 2.0 at 260/280 respectively. If there is protein or phenol contamination, O.D. 260/280 will be significantly less than 1.0 (Sambrook et al., 1989). The yield of genomic DNA was 1.8 confirms the purity of isolated DNA sample. Agarose gel electrophoresis of the isolated DNA revealed that DNA was relatively intact and without RNA. Genomic DNA from P. multocida P52 was used as template at a concentration of 40ng per reaction. Negative control was always kept to check any non specific amplification. Both the genes were successfully amplified through polymerase chain reaction. Both the genes of P. multocida serotype B:2 were cloned in pGEMT-Easy vector and recombinant clones were screened by blue/white screening. The pGEM-Z vectors containing a sequence coding for the lac α peptide were interrupted by a multiple cloning sites. Non recombinants plasmids produce a functional α-peptide, which by complementing the product of host cells lacZ-M15 gene, leads to the production of functional β-galactosidase. Bacterial colonies harbouring lacZ-M15 gene and pGEM-Z vectors were blue in colour when plated on indicator plates containing IPTG and X-Gal. However, when the lac αpeptide was disrupted by cloning in pGEM-Z multiple cloning region complementation did not occur and no β-galactosidase activity was observed. Therefore, bacterial colonies harbouring recombinant pGEMZ vectors constructs were white (Sambrook et al., 1989). Clones showing positive results after plasmid profiling and restriction digestion, were sequenced by the DNA sequencing facility at UDSC, Department of Biochemistry, University of Delhi, South Campus, New Delhi. Sequence analysis of omp 87 gene Sequencing of omp87 gene revealed the length of sequence was 2121bp. The C-terminus of Oma87 reveals typical characteristic of OMPs. The last residue at the C-terminus, phenylalanine, was highly conserved among outer membrane proteins and is essential for stability and correct assembly of protein into the outer membrane. According to Ruffolo and Adler (1996) the last 10 amino acid residues of membrane proteins, including the terminal phenylalanine, have conserved hydrophobic residues which are important for incorporation of the protein in the membrane. The last 10 residues Q-F-Q-F-S-I-G-G-T-F, of Oma87 contain the conserved hydrophobic residues at positions 2, 4, 6 and 10. Although the glycine at position 8 is not hydrophobic, given the overall conservation of the other residues, particularly the terminal phenylalanine it is most probable that these residues form a membrane spanning region, with the C-terminus of Oma87 possibly directed towards the periplasm. The conserved C-terminal amino acids are also present in the H. influenzae D15 surface antigen. At nucleotide level, a total of 105 substitutions could be observed in the omp87 sequence. Out of these 105 substitutions, Adenine into Cytosine, Adenine into Guanine, Adenine into Thymine, Cytosine into Guanine, Cytosine into thymine were present at 6, 30, 10, 7, 42 and 10th positions respectively. These substitutions might play an important role in proper packaging of the gene with in the genome of P. multocida. These substitutions might be providing functional stability to the organism in terms of protein structure. At amino acid level a total of 37 substitutions were found. Out of these, 3 substitutions were from aromatic to aliphatic amino acid and rest were within aliphatic amino acids. At position 149 and 284 aspartic acid is substituted into glutamic acid and glutamic acid is converted in aspartic acid so both substitutions nullify each other. The residue substitution of amino acid from aliphatic to aliphatic or aromatic to aromatic or even change of amino acid with similar structures and functions into one another makes no difference in the overall biophysical property of a protein like isoelectric pH, conductivity and charge interactions. However, substitutions at some critical positions may alter the structure of the molecular scaffold of proteins resulting into slightly altered properties. Sequence analysis of omp 34 gene The sequence analysis of coding region of omp34 gene revealed the presence of 942bp. This stretch of 942 nucleotides was devoid of the signal sequence, which is reported to comprise of 60 nucleotides (Luo et al., 1997). On comparison, it is clearly evident that at nucleotide level, a total of 17 substitutions could be recorded. Out of these 17 substitutions, adenine was ubstituted by cytosine at two positions (619 and 939). Adenine was substituted by guanine at eight positions 218, 576, 606, 735, 765, 797, 932 and 937. Besides this, there was only one substitution of adenine to thymine at 938 position. Out of the rest six substitutions, cytosine was substituted by thymine at four places and thymine by cytosine at two places. Thymine and cytosine being pyrimidines had smaller structure than purines (adenine and guanine). On alignment of the protein sequences, we have observed no significant difference at amino acid level because all substitutions were within aliphatic amino acids. At amino acid position 203 alanine is substituted by lysine whereas, it is interesting to note that at amino acid position 313 lysine was substituted to valine. Here it can be emphasized that valine and alanine both are aliphatic amino acid with similar properties. So it can be claimed that these two substitutions at positions 203 and 313 may not result in significant changes in the protein. At positions 266 and 311, glutamic and aspartic acids were substituted by glycine. Isoelectric point of acids was low i.e. around one or two in comparison to glycine i.e. to 6. So we concluded that isoelectric point of the protein formed by gene ompH of B:2 becomes slightly high in comparison to ompH of A:1 due to loss of two acids in the protein sequence. Three other substitutions also occurred i.e. asparagine with serine, alanine with valine and lysine with glutamine at positions 73, 201, and 207 respectively. The Laser gene software (DNA SATR) analysis of omp34 gene predicted a protein having the characteristics of typical gram-negative bacterial porins. The amino acid sequence showed similarities to outer membrane proteins of other bacterial species indicating the conserved nature of the omp gene in gram-negative bacteria. Amino acid composition also indicated that it was non specific bacterial porin in its highly negative hydropathy index with high glycine, low proline and lacking in cysteine content (Luo et al., 1999). Based on amino acid composition and hydropathy profile we proposed that omp34 was membrane associated protein. Hydrophilic domain corresponding to cell surface-exposed domain were highly variable in their amino acid composition. A number of hydrophilic peaks of omp34 corresponded the predicted surface exposed domain. Primary and secondary structure of the deduced protein sequences were also studied with the help of PROTPARAM, Pfam and PDBsum tools of ExPAsy server. Pfam analysis showed the presence of one conserved domain in omp 34 i.e. Porin_1 and six domains in omp 87 i.e. five Surface Antigen Variable number repeats and one Bacterial surface Antigen. Surface Ag VNR is found primarily in bacterial surface antigen normally as variable number repeats at the N-terminus. The Cterminus of these proteins is normally represented by Bacterial Surface Antigen. Omp34 belongs to beta-barrel protein superfamily. The outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria acts as a molecular filter for hydrophilic compounds. Proteins known as porins are responsible for the molecular sieve properties of the outer membrane. Porin is a major antigenic outer membrane protein of P. multocida and has high immunogenicity in antibody production (Lee et al., 2007). Transmembrane helices of both the genes were also predicted by Tmpred server. Five helices were found in omp34 and best path of transmembrane helices is from 89-108 residues at amino acid level. In omp87, 10 helices were found from inside to outside and outside to inside. Summary Chapter 6 Summary Pasteurella multocida serotype B:2 is the causative agent of Haemorrhagic septicaemia (HS), a fatal disease of cattle and buffaloes. It is one of most fatal disease in India due to the high mortality of susceptible populations. Control of HS has always remained a problem because current vaccines are not sufficiently effective and require repeated administration. At the present, formalin inactivated whole cell bacterin is used to prepare vaccines in India. This vaccine has several limitations such as short term immunity, poor syringibility and production problem. To overcome from these problems there is an urgent need of search of a conserved immunogenic protein as a vaccine candidate. To achieve the objective, gene encoding omp87 and 34 are targeted for production r-DNA vaccine of HS in the present study. The recombinant subunit vaccine should produce longer lasting protection against multiple P. multocida serotypes with no possibility of reverting to virulence. This represents a new vaccine, which has potentially broader specificity against the infectious agent, resulting in a superior safety and efficacy profile when compared to other vaccine or antibiotic approaches providing a competitive alternative for animal health industry. In r-DNA vaccine preparation, the most important criteria is to target an immunopotent gene. Outer membrane proteins of P. multocida are reported to be immunogenic and protective. So the present study was undertaken to identify and clone the P. multocida P52 (serotype B:2) gene(s) encoding 87 and 34 kDa outer membrane proteins in E. coli and to evaluate their immunogenicity. Nucleotide sequence analysis with phylogenetic analysis of both the proteins was performed to derive ancestral relationship between different serotypes. Further amino acid sequences were deduced from the nucleotide sequences and primary and secondary structures were also studied. The results of the present study are summarized below: P. multocida B:2 was revived and found to be pathogenic to mice, causing 100% mortality with in 24 hrs . P. multocida (B:2) specific PCR was done to check the purity of P52 strain using KT-61 and KT-72 oligoes and positive result with a band size of 620bp was found. Results of SDS-PAGE analysis of P. multocida B:2 outer membrane proteins revealed the presence of eight bands. The molecular weight of the major polypeptide bands ranged from 16 to 87 kDa. The major bands were of 16, 27, 30, 34, 37, 44, 68 and 87 kDa. Polyclonal antibodies were raised in rabbit against sonicated antigen. Three precipitin lines were produced between whole cell antigen and hyperimmnune immunodiffusion test. sera when checked by To identify the immunogenic polypeptides, western blotting was done with hyperimmune serum. Polypeptides of 16, 30, 34, 37, 44, 68 and 87 kDa showed positive reaction with antiserum and were found to be immunogenic. DNA from P.multocida B:2 was isolated by using C-TAB method which was used as a template for amplification of genes encoding both the outer membrane proteins. Genes were amplified by PCR using different sets of primers. The amplification product of omp87 and omp34 were found to be 2373 bp and 942bp respectively. The purified PCR products were cloned into pGEM-T Easy vector. The transformed colonies were screened by blue-white screening on LB agar plates with ampicillin, IPTG and X-gal. Few colonies were selected and screened by PCR using omp specific primers. Plasmid DNA was isolated from the PCR positive colonies and recombinant plasmids were screened for the presence of desired inserts by restriction enzyme analysis with NotI enzyme to verify the size. The results confirmed a product of 2373 bp from clone of omp87 and a product of 942 bp from the clone of omp34. Both the cloned omp genes were sequenced and were submitted to NCBI gene database and provided the accession numbers EU570212 and EU162755 for the omp87 and omp34 respectively. The sequencing data revealed the length of omp34 was 942 nucleotides with termination at stop codon 940TAA942. The predicted primary protein is composed of 313 amino acid without a signal sequence. The mature protein had molecular mass of 33.7 kDa. Further comparison of nucleotide sequence of omp34 of P. multocida B:2 showed 98.3% similarity with serotype B 3,4 while homology at amino acid level was 97.1%. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that serotype B:2 could be grouped with serotype B 3,4. Sequencing of omp87 gene revealed the presence of 2121 bp. The predicted primary protein is composed of 707 amino acid without a signal sequence. Nucleotide sequence of omp87 of P. multocida B:2 showed 94.8% similarity with that of P. multocida serotype A:1 strain while the homology at amino acid level was 95.2%. 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Expression of a truncated Pasteurella multocida toxin antigen in Bordetella bronchiseptica. Vet. Microbiology. 94(4): 313-323. Rani, S. S., Chaturvedi, V.K., Gupta, P.K., Joseph, S., Nair, B. C and Pandey, K. D (2006). Cloning and characterisation of the ahpA gene of Pasteurella multocida serogroup B:2 (strain P52): short communication. Acat. Vet. Hung. 54(4): 449-453. Ratledge, C., Dover, L. G. (2000). Iron metabolism in pathogenic bacteria. Annu. Rev. microbial. 54: 881-942. Rimler, R. B. (2001). Purification of a cross-protective antigen from Pasteurella multocida grown in vitro and in vivo. Avian Disease. 45: 572-580. Rimler, R.B., Augus ,R.D. and Phillips, M. (1989). Evaluation of the specificity of P. multocida somatic antigen typing antisera prepared in chickens using ribosome–lipopolysaccharide complexes as inocula. American Journal of Veterinary Research. 50: 29-31. Rosenberg, I. M. (1996). Recombinant proteins techniques. In: Protein analysis and purification, Rosenberg, I.M. (ed), Boston., M.A. : Birkauser publication. Rosenbusch, C.T and Merchant, I.A. (1939). A study of Haemorrhagic Septicaemia pasteurellae. J. Bacteriology. 37: 69-89. Ruffolo, C. G. and Adler, B. (1996). Cloning sequencing, expression and protective capacity of the Oma 87 gene encoding the P. multocida 87-KDa outer membrane antigen. Infection and Immunity. 64 (8): 3161-3167. S. H. Basagoudanavar., D,K. Singh and B. C. Varshney. (2006). Immunization with outer membrane proteins Pasteurella multocida (6:B) provides protection in mice. Journal of Veterinary Medicine Series A 53 (10): 524-530. Sambrook, J., Fristch, E.F.,and Maniatis, T. (1989). Molecular cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd Edition , New York : Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press , Clod Sping Harbor Scott, P. C., J. F. Markham. and K. G. Whitear. 1999. Safety and efficacy of two live Pasteurella multocida aroA mutant vaccines in chickens. Avian Dis. 43: 83-88. Shah, N. 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Use of a 35.5 cell membrane protein of Pasteurella multocida and an antidiotype antibody to induce protective immunity in leg horn chickens.Vet. Immunol.Immunopathol. 41: 89-100. Zhao, G., Pijoan, C., Choi-K, Maheshwaran, S.K. and Trigo, E. (1995). Expression of iron- regulated outer membrane proteins by porcine strains of Pasteurella multocida .Canad. J. Vet. Res. 59: 46-50. Appendix APPENDIX-I (A) MEDIA USED Luria-Bertani (LB) medium Bacto tryptone 10.0 Yeast extract 5.0 NaCl 5.0 Agar 2% pH 7.0 (B) GENERAL BUFFERS AND REAGENTS 1. Stock solutions a. Phosphate buffered saline (PBS) (pH-7.2) Sodium chloride (NaCl) 8.0 gm Disodium hydrogen phosphate (Na2HPO4) 1.16 gm Potassium chloride (KCl) 0.2 gm Potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KH2PO4) 0.2 gm Add distilled water to make 1000 ml. Sterilized by autoclaving for 20 min. b. Hepes buffer 10mM (pH 7.4) Hepes buffer 0.476 gm was dissolved in 200ml distilled water and filtered it through .2μm filter paper. c. 2 % (w/v) sodium lauryl sarcosinate 2 gm of sodium lauryl sarcosinate was dissolved in 100ml distilled water. Freshly prepared. d. Ampicillin stock solution (50mg/ml) Ampicillin (sodium salt) 500mg Distilled water 10ml Sterilize by filtration. e. Kanamycin (15mg/ml) Kanamycin 200mg Distilled water 10ml Sterilize by filtration. f. Isopropyl β-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) (1M) IPTG 238 mg Distilled water 1 ml Sterilized by filtration, store at -200C. (C) REAGENTS FOR SDS-PAGE 1. Stock solutions a. 30% Acrylamide Acrylamide 29.2g N-N methylene Bis-acrylamide 0.8 g Triple distilled water (TDW) 100 ml Fiters through whatmann No.1 and stored at 4 0C in dark bottles. b. Separating gel buffer 2M TRIS (pH 8.8) Tris buffer 24.2g was dissolved in 75ml of TDW. Adjust pH with conc. HCl and volume was made 100ml. c. Stacking gel buffer 0.5 M TRIS (pH 6.8) Tris buffer 6.057 was dissolved in 75 ml of TDW. Adjust pH with conc. HCl and volume was made 100ml. d. 10% Ammonium per sulphate In 1 ml Triple Distilled Water 0.1 gm APS was dissolved. e. 10% SDS 1.0gm of SDS was dissolved in 10 ml TDW. f. Sample buffer Component ml 0.5 M Tris (pH 6.8) 1.2 10% SDS 2.0 Glycerol 1.0 TDW 4.8 0.5% Bromophenol blue (W/V) 0.5 Β- mercaptoethanol 0.5 g. Electrode buffer (pH8.2) Component g/l Tris buffer 3.025 Glycine 14.509 SDS 1.0 h. Staining Solution In 25 ml TDW 0.5g Coomassie blue R-250 was dissolved. This solution was mixed with 720 ml TDW containing 180ml methanol and 60 ml glacial acetic acid, filtered through Whatman No. 1 filter paper and stored at room temperature. i. Destaining Solution 10% Glacial aceteic acid and 35% methanol was used as destaining solution. 2. Working solution a. Separating gel Distilled water 2 ml Resolving buffer (pH 8.8) 1.4 ml Acrylamide (30%) 2.5 ml 10% SDS 50 μl 10% APS 50 μl TEMED 4 μl b. Stacking gel Distilled water Stacking buffer 2 ml (pH 6.8) 622μl Acrylamide (30%) 310 μl 10% SDS 25 μl 10% APS 25μl TEMED 4 μl (D) SOLUTIONS FOR WESTERN BLOTTING a. Blocking buffer Wash buffer 100ml BSA 1gm b. Substrate buffer 50mM Tris-Cl (pH 7.6) 10ml Diamino benzidine 6mg Hydrogen peroxide 6μl Freshly prepared just before use and Diamino benzidine store at 20 0C. c. Wash buffer PBS (7.4) 1000ml Tween-20 500μl d. Transfer buffer Tris 12.1g Glycine 56.64g Methanol 800ml Final volume was made 4 liter of with TDW and stored at 40C after autoclaving. (E) REAGENTS FOR GENOMIC DNA ISOLATION NaCl 5M Phenol: Chloroform 1:1 Chloroform: isoamyl alcohol 24 : 1 a. RNase (10 mg/ml) RNase 10 mg Distilled water 1 ml Heated in boiling water bath for 15 minutes. Stored at -200C. b. Proteinase K (20 mg/ml) Proteinase K 20 mg Distilled water 1 ml Stored at -200C. c. Sodium acetate (3M) Sodium acetate 24.6 gm Distilled water 100 ml d. Tris EDTA (pH 8.0) Tris Cl 10mM EDTA 1mM (F) REAGENTS FOR AGAROSE GEL ELECTROPHORESIS a. TAE (50X) (pH 7.8) Tris 24.29 g 0.5M EDTA 10mM Glacial acetic acid 5.7 ml Final volume 100 ml Working solution is 1X b. Gel loading dye Bromophenol blue 0.25% Sucrose in water 40% (W/V) c. Intercalating Dye Ethidium bromide 10 mg Distilled water 1 ml (G) REAGENTS FOR PLASMID ISOLATION a. Resuspension buffer Glucose 50mM Tris-Cl(pH 8.0) 25mM EDTA (pH 8.0) 10mM Autoclaved for15 min at 15-lb/sq. Stored at 40C. b. Lysis buffer I NaOH 0.2N SDS 1.0% c. Lysis buffer II 5M Potassium acetate 60ml Glacial acetic acid 11.5ml Distilled water 28.5ml The resulting solution will be 3M with respect to potassium and 5M with respect to acetate. My NCBI [Sign In] [Register] PubMed Search Nucleotide Protein CoreNucleotide Genome Structure PMC Taxonomy OMIM Books Go for You need JavaScript to work with this page. Limits Preview/Index GenBank Display Show all but gene, CDS and mRNA features Range: from begin to end 5 History Send to Clipboard Details Hide: Reverse complemented strand Features: 1: EU570212. Reports Pasteurella multo...[gi:171740840] sequence Refresh Links Features Sequence LOCUS EU570212 2396 bp DNA linear BCT 06-APR-2008 DEFINITION Pasteurella multocida outer membrane protein 87 gene, partial cds. ACCESSION EU570212 VERSION EU570212.1 GI:171740840 KEYWORDS . SOURCE Pasteurella multocida ORGANISM Pasteurella multocida Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Gammaproteobacteria; Pasteurellales; Pasteurellaceae; Pasteurella. REFERENCE 1 (bases 1 to 2396) AUTHORS Saxena,A., Yadav,A., Saxena,M.K., Rao,V.D.P. and Sharma,B. TITLE Pateurella multocida OMP87 immunogenicity JOURNAL Unpublished REFERENCE 2 (bases 1 to 2396) AUTHORS Saxena,A., Yadav,A., Saxena,M.K., Rao,V.D.P. and Sharma,B. TITLE Direct Submission JOURNAL Submitted (15-MAR-2008) Biochemistry, Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Bareilly, U.P. 243122, India FEATURES Location/Qualifiers source 1..2396 /organism="Pasteurella multocida" /mol_type="genomic DNA" /db_xref="taxon:747" CDS <1..2364 /note="OMP87" /codon_start=1 /transl_table=11 /product="outer membrane protein 87" /protein_id="ACB54932.1" /db_xref="GI:171740841" /translation="LIASLLFGSTTAFAAPFVVKDIRVDGVQAGTEGSVLATLPVRVG QRATDNDIANVVRKLFLSGQYDDVKASREGNTLVVTVMPKPVISNVVIDGNKSIPDEA IKQNLDANGFKVGDVLNRAKLEEFRKGIIEHYNSVGRYNAKVEAIVNTLPNNSAEIKI QINEDDVALFKEIIFEGNQAFSSSKLEDQMELQTDAWWKLFGNKFDQTQFNKDLETLR SYYLDRGYAQFQILDTDIKLSDDKKEARVIIKVKEGDLYTVKCARILGDVGGMSAELA PILDTIQLNGLFRRANVLEVEQRIKSKLGERGYATAQVNVHPTFDEQDKTISLDFIVE AGKSYTVRQIRFEGNTSSADSTLRQEMRQQEGAWLSSELVELGKLRLDRTGFFESVET KTEAIPGSDQVDVIYKVKERNTGSINFGIGYGTESGLSYQASIKQDNFLGMGSSISLG GTRNDYGTTINLGYNEPYFTKDGVSLGGNVFFEEYDSSKSNTSAAYGRTSYGGNLTLG FPVNENNSYYLGVGYTYNKLKNIAPEYNRDLYRQSMKYNDSWTFKSHDFDLSFGWNYN SLNRGYFPTKGVRANIGGRVTIPGSDNKYYKLNAEAQGFYPLDREHGWVLSSRISASF ADGFGGKRLPFYQYYSAGGIGSLRGFAYGAIGPNAIYRTRQCPDSYCLVSSDVIGGNA MVTASTELIVPTPFVADKNQNSVRTSLFVDAASVWNTRWKAEDKAKFAKLNVPDYSDP SRVRASAGVALQWQSPIGPLVFSYAKPLKKYQGDEIEQFQFSIGGTF" ORIGIN 1 ttaattgcga gcttattatt tggttcaacc actgcatttg ctgcgccgtt tgtagtgaaa 61 gacattcgtg ttgacggtgt tcaagcaggt acagaaggaa gtgtattagc tacacttcct 121 gttcgtgttg ggcagcgagc aacagataac gatattgcta atgtggtacg aaaattattc 181 ctgagtgggc aatatgatga tgtgaaagca agtcgcgaag ggaatacttt agttgtgaca 241 gtcatgccta aacctgttat ttcaaacgtc gtgattgacg gtaataaatc gattcctgat 301 gaagcaatta aacaaaactt agatgcgaat ggctttaaag tcggtgatgt attaaaccgt 361 gctaaattag aagaatttcg gaaagggatt atcgaacact acaatagtgt cggtcgctat 421 aatgcgaagg tagaggctat cgtgaataca ctaccaaata atagcgcgga aattaaaatt 481 caaattaatg aagatgatgt tgcactattt aaagaaatta tttttgaagg taatcaagca 541 tttagcagca gtaaattaga agatcaaatg gagcttcaaa cagatgcatg gtggaaattg 601 tttggtaaca aatttgatca aacccaattc aataaagatt tagagacctt acgtagctat 661 tatttagatc gtggttacgc gcaattccaa attttagata ctgatatcaa attaagtgat 721 gataaaaaag aagcgcgtgt cattattaaa gtgaaagaag gtgacttata tacagtgaaa 781 tgcgcgcgta ttctggggga tgtgggtggc atgtcagcag aacttgctcc gattttagat 841 acgattcaac taaatggtct tttccgtcgc gcaaacgtat tggaagttga acaacgcatt 901 aaatcgaagt taggtgaaag aggttatgcg actgcgcaag tcaatgttca cccgacattt 961 gacgaacaag ataaaacgat ttcgttagat tttattgttg aagcaggcaa aagttatacg 1021 gttcgccaaa ttcgttttga aggcaataca agtagtgcag atagcacctt acgtcaggaa 1081 atgcgtcaac taaattacgt 1141 ttagatcgta cccgggttct 1201 gatcaagtcg taactttggt 1261 attggttatg ggataacttc 1321 ttaggaatgg tactacaatc 1381 aatcttggtt tggcaatgtt 1441 ttctttgaag acggactagc 1501 tatggtggta ttatcttggt 1561 gtgggctata tgatttatat 1621 cgccaatcaa tgatttgtct 1681 tttggttgga ggtacgtgcc 1741 aatattggtg actcaatgca 1801 gaagcacaag aagccgtatt 1861 agtgcctctt atattatagc 1921 gcaggcggta aaatgcaatt 1981 tatcgtacac gattgggggg 2041 aatgcaatgg cgcagataaa 2101 aatcaaaact gaatacgcgt 2161 tggaaagcag cagtgaccca 2221 agtcgcgttc tggaccgttg 2281 gtgttctctt gcagttccaa 2341 ttcagcattg agccat // aagaaggcgc ttggctatcc tcggagttgg ttgagttagg cggggttctt tgagagtgta gaaaccaaaa cagaagctat atgtgattta taaagtcaaa gagcgtaata cgggtagcat gtacagaaag tgggttgagc taccaagcca gtattaaaca gatcttctat tagtttaggt gggacgcgta atgactacgg ataatgagcc gtactttacc aaagatggtg tgagcctcgg aatatgatag ttccaaaagt aatacctctg cggcctatgg atttgacact aggctttccg gtgaatgaga ataactcata cgtataataa attgaagaat atcgcgccgg aatataatcg tgaaatataa tgattcttgg acctttaaat cgcacgattt attataacag ccttaaccgt ggctatttcc caactaaagg gacgagtgac cattccgggc tcagacaata aatattataa ggttctatcc gttagatcgt gaacatggtt gggtactttc ttgctgatgg atttggtggt aagcgtttgc cgttctatca tcgggagttt acgtggcttt gcctatggtg cgattggacc gtcaatgtcc tgacagctat tgtttagtca gtagcgatgt tcaccgccag taccgaactc attgtcccaa caccatttgt cagtaagaac ttctttgttt gtggatgccg caagtgtgtg aggataaagc aaaatttgca aaattgaatg tgccagatta gtgcttcagc tggggtggcg cttcaatggc aatcgccaat atgcgaaacc tcttaagaaa taccaaggcg atgaaattga gtgggacgtt ctaaaagctt ggatcttgct gaaaaactcg Disclaimer | Write to the Help Desk NCBI | NLM | NIH My NCBI [Sign In] [Register] PubMed Nucleotide Protein Genome Structure PMC Taxonomy OMIM Books Search Nucleotide for Go You need JavaScript to work with this page. Limits Preview/Index History GenBank Display Show all but gene, CDS and mRNA features Range: from begin to end 5 Send to Clipboard Details Hide: sequence Reverse complemented strand Features: 1: EU162755. Reports Pasteurella multo...[gi:161138207] Refresh Links Features Sequence LOCUS EU162755 942 bp DNA linear BCT 03-DEC-2007 DEFINITION Pasteurella multocida strain P:52 adhesive protein (ompH) gene, partial cds. ACCESSION EU162755 VERSION EU162755.1 GI:161138207 KEYWORDS . SOURCE Pasteurella multocida ORGANISM Pasteurella multocida Bacteria; Proteobacteria; Gammaproteobacteria; Pasteurellales; Pasteurellaceae; Pasteurella. REFERENCE 1 (bases 1 to 942) AUTHORS Yadav,A., Saxena,M.K., Rao,V.D.P. and Sharma,B. TITLE OMPH of Pasterella multocida vaccine strain: in vitro expressed protein immunogenicity JOURNAL Unpublished REFERENCE 2 (bases 1 to 942) AUTHORS Yadav,A., Saxena,M.K., Rao,V.D.P. and Sharma,B. TITLE Direct Submission JOURNAL Submitted (19-SEP-2007) Biochemistry, Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Bareilly, U.P. 243122, India FEATURES Location/Qualifiers source 1..942 /organism="Pasteurella multocida" /mol_type="genomic DNA" /strain="P:52" /db_xref="taxon:747" gene <1..942 /gene="ompH" CDS <1..942 /gene="ompH" /note="OmpH" /codon_start=1 /transl_table=11 /product="adhesive protein" /protein_id="ABX58059.1" /db_xref="GI:161138208" /translation="ATVYNQDGTKVDVNGSVRLILKKEKNERGDLVDNGSRVSFKASH DLGEGLSALAYAELRFSTKVKKTVKEGPSQVERIGNDVHVKRLYAGFAYEGLGTLTFG NQLTIGDDVGVSDYTYFLGGINNLLSSGEKAINFKSAEFNGFTFGGAYVFSADADKQA PRDGRGFVVAGLYNRKMGDVGFALEAGYSQKYVTVAKQEKAFMVGTELSYAGLALGVD YAQSKVTNVEGKKRALEVGLNYDINDKAKVYTDLIWAKGGPKGATTRDRSIILGAGYK LHKQVETFVEGGWGREKDANGVTTKGNVVGVGLRVHF" ORIGIN 1 gcaacagttt acaatcaaga cggtacaaaa gttgatgtaa atggttctgt acgtttaatc 61 cttaaaaaag aaaaaaatga gcgcggtgat ttagtggata acggttcacg cgtttctttc 121 aaagcatctc atgacttagg cgaaggttta agcgcattag cttacgcaga acttcgtttc 181 agcacaaaag ttaaaaaaac agttaaagaa ggtcctagcc aagttgagcg tatcggtaat 241 gatgttcacg taaaacgtct ttatgcgggt ttcgcgtatg aaggtttagg aacattaact 301 ttcggtaacc aattaactat cggtgatgat gttggtgtgt ctgactacac ttacttctta 361 ggtggtatca acaatcttct ttctagcggt gaaaaagcaa ttaactttaa atctgcagaa 421 ttcaacggtt tcacatttgg tggtgcgtat gtgttctctg cggatgcaga caaacaagca 481 ccacgtgatg gtcgcggttt cgttgtagca ggtttatata acagaaaaat gggcgatgtt 541 ggtttcgcac ttgaagcggg ttatagccaa aaatatgtaa cagtagcgaa acaagaaaaa 601 gcctttatgg ttggtactga attatcatac gctggtttag cacttggtgt tgactatgca 661 caatctaaag tgactaacgt agaaggtaaa aaacgcgcac ttgaagtggg tttaaactat 721 gatattaatg acaaagcgaa agtttacact gacttgattt gggcaaaagg aggtccaaaa 781 ggtgcgacta caagagatcg ttctatcatc ttaggtgcgg gctacaagct tcacaaacaa 841 gttgaaacct ttgttgaagg tggctggggc agagagaaag atgctaatgg cgtaacaaca 901 aaaggcaatg tcgttggtgt tggtttacgc gtacacttct aa // Disclaimer | Write to the Help Desk NCBI | NLM | NIH ExPASy ProtParam tool ExPASy Home page Site Map Search ExPASy Contact us Proteomics tools Swiss-Prot Search for ProtParam User-provided sequence: 10 20 30 40 50 60 M KKLLIASLL FGSTTAFAAP FVVKDIRVDG VQAGTEGSVL ATDNDIANVV 70 80 90 100 110 120 R KLFLSGQYD DVKASREGNT LVVTVMPKPV ISNVVIDGNK LDANGFKVGD 130 140 150 160 170 180 V LNRAKLEEF RKGIIEHYNS VGRYNAKVEA IVNTLPNNSA VALFKEIIFE 190 200 210 220 230 240 G NQAFSSSKL EDQMELQTDA WWKLFGNKFD QTQFNKDLET AQFQILDTDI 250 260 270 280 290 300 K LSDDKKEAR VIIKVKEGDL YTVKCARILG DVGGMSAELA LFRRANVLEV 310 320 330 340 350 360 E QRIKSKLGE RGYATAQVNV HPTFDEQDKT ISLDFIVEAG EGNTSSADST 370 380 390 400 410 420 L RQEMRQQEG AWLSSELVEL GKLRLDRTGF FESVETKTEA ISQERNTGSI 430 440 450 460 470 480 N FGIGYGTES GLSYQASIKQ DNFLGMGSSI SLGGTRNDYG YFTKDGVSLG 490 500 510 520 530 540 G NVFFEEYDS SKSNTSAAYG RTSYGGNLTL GFPVNENNSY LKNIAPEYNR 550 560 570 580 590 600 D LYRQSMKYN DSWTFKSHDF DLSFGWNYNS LNRGYFPTKG IPGSDNKYYK 610 620 630 640 650 660 L NAEAQGFYP LDREHGWVLS SRISASFADG FGGKRLPFYQ RGFAYGAIGP 670 680 690 700 710 720 N AIYRTRQCP DSYCLVSSDV IGGNAMVTAS TELIVPTPFV SLFVDAASVW 730 740 750 760 770 780 N TRWKAEDKA KFAKLNVPDY SDPSRVRASA GVALQWQSPI LKKYQGDEIE 790 Q FQFSIGGTF References and documentation are available. Please note the modified algorithm for extinction coefficient. Number of amino acids: 790 Molecular weight: 87571.1 Theoretical pI: 5.94 http://www.expasy.ch/cgi-bin/protparam (1 of 3)1/11/2008 12:31:22 PM ATLPVRVGQR SIPDEAIKQN EIKIQINEDD LRSYYLDRGY PILDTIQLNG KSYTVRQIRF IPGSDQVDVI TTINLGYNEP YLGVGYTYNK VRANIGGRVT YYSAGGIGSL ADKNQNSVRT GPLVSSYAKP Swiss-Prot/TrEMBL Go Clear ExPASy ProtParam tool Amino acid composition: Ala (A) 55 7.0% Arg (R) 40 5.1% Asn (N) 49 6.2% Asp (D) 50 6.3% Cys (C) 3 0.4% Gln (Q) 34 4.3% Glu (E) 43 5.4% Gly (G) 72 9.1% His (H) 4 0.5% Ile (I) 46 5.8% Leu (L) 61 7.7% Lys (K) 49 6.2% Met (M) 8 1.0% Phe (F) 40 5.1% Pro (P) 25 3.2% Ser (S) 66 8.4% Thr (T) 43 5.4% Trp (W) 9 1.1% Tyr (Y) 38 4.8% Val (V) 55 7.0% Asx (B) 0 0.0% Glx (Z) 0 0.0% Xaa (X) 0 0.0% Total number of negatively charged residues (Asp + Glu): 93 Total number of positively charged residues (Arg + Lys): 89 Atomic composition: Carbon C 3910 Hydrogen H 6063 Nitrogen N 1059 Oxygen O 1207 Sulfur S 11 Formula: C3910H6063N1059O1207S11 Total number of atoms: 12250 Extinction coefficients: Extinction coefficients are in units of M-1 cm-1, at 280 nm measured in water. Ext. coefficient 106245 Abs 0.1% (=1 g/l) 1.213, assuming ALL Cys residues appear as half cystines http://www.expasy.ch/cgi-bin/protparam (2 of 3)1/11/2008 12:31:22 PM CSV format ExPASy ProtParam tool Ext. coefficient 106120 Abs 0.1% (=1 g/l) 1.212, assuming NO Cys residues appear as half cystines Estimated half-life: The N-terminal of the sequence considered is M (Met). The estimated half-life is: 30 hours (mammalian reticulocytes, in vitro). >20 hours (yeast, in vivo). >10 hours (Escherichia coli, in vivo). Instability index: The instability index (II) is computed to be 30.11 This classifies the protein as stable. Aliphatic index: 79.97 Grand average of hydropathicity (GRAVY): -0.387 ExPASy Home page Site Map Search ExPASy Contact us Proteomics tools Swiss-Prot Search for http://www.expasy.ch/cgi-bin/protparam (3 of 3)1/11/2008 12:31:22 PM ProtParam User-provided sequence: 10 20 30 40 50 60 ATVYNQDGTK VDVNGSVRLI LKKEKNERGD LVDNGSRVSF KASHDLGEGL SALAYAELRF 70 80 90 100 110 120 STKVKKTVKE GPSQVERIGN DVHVKRLYAG FAYEGLGTLT FGNQLTIGDD VGVSDYTYFL 130 140 150 160 170 180 GGINNLLSSG EKAINFKSAE FNGFTFGGAY VFSADADKQA PRDGRGFVVA GLYNRKMGDV 190 200 210 220 230 240 GFALEAGYSQ KYVTVAKQEK AFMVGTELSY AGLALGVDYA QSKVTNVEGK KRALEVGLNY 250 260 270 280 290 300 DINDKAKVYT DLIWAKGGPK GATTRDRSII LGAGYKLHKQ VETFVEGGWG REKDANGVTT 310 KGNVVGVGLR VHF References and documentation are available. Please note the modified algorithm for extinction coefficient. Number of amino acids: 313 Molecular weight: 33761.0 Theoretical pI: 9.12 Amino acid composition: Ala (A) 27 8.6% Arg (R) 14 4.5% Asn (N) 16 5.1% Asp (D) 19 6.1% Cys (C) 0 0.0% Gln (Q) 8 2.6% Glu (E) 17 5.4% Gly (G) 43 13.7% His (H) 4 1.3% Ile (I) 9 2.9% Leu (L) 25 8.0% Lys (K) 28 8.9% Met (M) 2 0.6% Phe (F) 15 4.8% Pro (P) 3 1.0% Ser (S) 16 5.1% Thr (T) 18 5.8% Trp (W) 2 0.6% Tyr (Y) 15 4.8% Val (V) 32 10.2% Asx (B) Glx (Z) 0 0 0.0% 0.0% CSV format Xaa (X) 0 0.0% Total number of negatively charged residues (Asp + Glu): 36 Total number of positively charged residues (Arg + Lys): 42 Atomic composition: Carbon Hydrogen Nitrogen Oxygen Sulfur C H N O S 1509 2369 417 459 2 Formula: C1509H2369N417O459S2 Total number of atoms: 4756 Extinction coefficients: Extinction coefficients are in units of water. Ext. coefficient Abs 0.1% (=1 g/l) cystines M-1 cm-1, at 280 nm measured in 33350 0.988, assuming ALL Cys residues appear as half Estimated half-life: The N-terminal of the sequence considered is A (Ala). The estimated half-life is: 4.4 hours (mammalian reticulocytes, in vitro). >20 hours (yeast, in vivo). >10 hours (Escherichia coli, in vivo). Instability index: The instability index (II) is computed to be 13.93 This classifies the protein as stable. Aliphatic index: 80.64 Grand average of hydropathicity (GRAVY): -0.318 [313 residues] Trusted matches - domains scoring higher than the gathering threshold (A) Domain Start End Bits Evalue Alignment Mode Porin_1 -90.90 0.00072 Align 6 313 ls Matches to Pfam-B Domain Start End Pfam-B_121714 260 Alignment 313 Align Potential matches - Domains with Evalues above the cutoff Domain Start End Bits Evalue Alignment Mode Opacity 211 313 -70.40 0.89 Align ls Porin_1 7 52 0.90 3.2 Align fs Transposase_11 218 284 3.50 0.45 Align fs Porin_1 269 313 7.50 0.048 Align fs Alignments of Pfam-A domains to HMMs Format for fetching alignments to seed Jalview Java alignment view er Alignment of Porin_1 vs UNKNOWN-QUERY/6-313 UNKNOWN-QU *->KdGNklDlygkvvglhyfsddtgtdgddtYaRiGFKGeTqindqLtG dG k+D g v + ++++ d d ++R+ FK + +++++L + 6 QDGTKVDVNGSVRLILKKEKNERGDLVDNGSRVSFKASHDLGEGLSA 52 UNKNOWN-QU 101 yGQwEynvs......vngtEgeqsnqwGs..gTRlaFaGLKfGdyGsfDy E ++s++ +++v+ + ++ + G++ ++ aG ++ + G++ 53 LAYAELRFStkvkktVKEGPSQ-VERIGNdvHVKRLYAGFAYEGLGTLTF UNKNOWN-QU 140 UNKNOWN-QU 180 UNKNOWN-QU 217 UNKNOWN-QU 257 UNKNOWN-QU 296 UNKNOWN-QU GRnygvlyDveawtDmlPefgGdtyasvaqtDnfmtgrangvaTRYRNpd G ++ +Dv+ D +f +++n+ + ++ + + + 102 GNQLTIGDDVG-VSD-YTYFL-------GGINNLLSSGEKAINF--KSAE FFGLVdGLnFalqyqGkNesrtrnngrdvrkqNGDGfgasltY..dngGf F G+ G + + + +G Gf ++ Y++++g 141 FNGFTFGGAYVFSADADKQA----------PRDGRGFVVAGLYnrKMGDV gfsyggaYansdrtddQklelkqtllgngdkaeawrlgaKYDaNnvYlAv gf++ + Y++ t ++ a+ +g ++ l v 181 GFALEAGYSQKYVTVA-------------KQEKAFMVGTELSYAGLALGV aYaqtrnmtpygggnadntvesdsgfanKtqnfEvvAqyqFDFGNLrPsv Yaq + + g++ + + + + + v+ G 218 DYAQSKVTNVEGKKR----ALEVGLNYDINDKAKVYTDLIWAKG-----sYlqsKgkdlngkkgdnDlvkYVdVGatYYFNKNmStyVdYkiNlldknd + ++ ++ d ++ Ga Y K t+V +++ ++++ + 258 ----GPKGATTR---DR----SIILGAGYKLHKQVETFVEGGWGREKDAN dftkaaGiatd.divaVGLvYqF<-* G++t +++v+VGL+ F 297 ------GVTTKgNVVGVGLRVHF 313 Align to seed Alignment of Transposase_11 vs UNKNOWN-QUERY/218-284 UNKNOWN-QU 264 UNKNOWN-QU 284 *->eyv.v.d.q.g.k.r.r.vyrkv.r.lke.py.k.kw.ilrrvvvvk +y+++++++ ++k+r +v +++++k ++y+ +w ++ ++ 218 DYAqSkVtNvEgKkRaLeVGLNYdInDKAkVYtDlIWaKGGPKGATT errkiklvaqkskkgketplyvtnlltelsaeeiaelyrlRwqvErv<-* ++r+i ++ + y+l++qvE++ 265 RDRSI---------------------------ILGAGYKLHKQVETF Align to seed Alignments of Pfam-B domains to best-matching to Pfam-B sequence Format for fetching alignments to Pfam-B families: Hypertext linked to sw isspfam Query Query/260-313 matching Pfam-B_121714 temp 260 KGATTRDRSIILGAGYKLHKQVETFVEGGWGREKDANGVTTKGNVVGVGL 309 KGATTRDRSIILGAGYKLHKQVETFVEGGWGREKDANGVTTKGNVVGVGL Query 260 KGATTRDRSIILGAGYKLHKQVETFVEGGWGREKDANGVTTKGNVVGVGL 309 temp 310 RVHF 313 RVHF Query 310 RVHF 313 Align to family TMpred output for unknown min=17 | max=33 | html | | plain_text | MKKLLIASLLFGSTTAFAAPFVVKDIRVDGVQAGTEGSVLATLPVRVGQRATDNDIAN VVRKLFLSGQYDDVKASREGNT% 0D% 0ALVVTVMPKPVISNVVIDGNKSIPDEAIKQNLDANGFKVGDVLNRAKLEEFRKGIIEH YNSVGRYNAKVEAIVNTLPNNSA% 0D% 0AEIKIQINEDDVALFKEIIFEGNQAFSSSKLEDQMELQTDAWWKLFGNKFDQTQFNKD LETLRSYYLDRGYAQFQILDTDI% 0D% 0AKLSDDKKEARVIIKVKEGDLYTVKCARILGDVGGMSAELAPILDTIQLNGLFRRANV LEVEQRIKSKLGERGYATAQVNV% 0D% 0AHPTFDEQDKTISLDFIVEAGKSYTVRQIRFEGNTSSADSTLRQEMRQQEGAWLSSELV ELGKLRLDRTGFFESVETKTEA% 0D%0AIPGSDQVDVIISQERNTGSINFGIGYGTESGLSYQASIKQDNFLGMGSSISLGGTR NDYGTTINLGYNEPYFTKDGVSLG %0D% 0AGNVFFEEYDSSKSNTSAAYGRTSYGGNLTLGFPVNENNSYYLGVGYTYNKLKNIAP EYNRDLYRQSMKYNDSWTFKSHDF %0D% 0ADLSFGWNYNSLNRGYFPTKGVRANIGGRVTIPGSDNKYYKLNAEAQGFYPLDREHG WVLSSRISASFADGFGGKRLPFYQ %0D% 0AYYSAGGIGSLRGFAYGAIGPNAIYRTRQCPDSYCLVSSDVIGGNAMVTASTELIVPTP FVADKNQNSVRTSLFVDAASVW% 0D%0ANTRWKAEDKAKFAKLNVPDYSDPSRVRASAGVALQWQSPIGPLVSSYAKPLK KYQGDEIEQFQFSIGGTF. TMpred output for unknown [ISREC-Server] Date: Fri Jan 11 8:04:57 Europe/Zurich 2008 Sequence: MKK...GTF, length: 790 Prediction parameters: TM-helix length between 17 and 33 1.) Possible transmembrane helices The sequence positions in brackets denominate the core region. Only scores above 500 are considered significant. Inside to outside helices : 5 found from to score center 4 ( 4) 23 ( 23) 1732 13 265 ( 267) 283 ( 283) 40 275 644 ( 644) 664 ( 664) 552 654 672 ( 675) 695 ( 692) 266 684 748 ( 748) 765 ( 765) 473 756 Outside to inside helices : 5 found from to score center 4 ( 4) 23 ( 23) 1469 13 497 ( 502) 525 ( 520) 9 512 635 ( 640) 659 ( 656) 537 648 675 ( 675) 701 ( 695) 502 685 748 ( 750) 768 ( 768) 143 758 2.) Table of correspondences http://www.ch.embnet.org/cgi-bin/TMPRED_form_parser (1 of 3)1/11/2008 12:34:35 PM TMpred output for unknown Here is shown, which of the inside->outside helices correspond to which of the outside->inside helices. Helices shown in brackets are considered insignificant. A "+"-symbol indicates a preference of this orientation. A "++"-symbol indicates a strong preference of this orientation. inside->outside | outside->inside 4- 23 (20) 1732 ++ | 4- 23 (20) 1469 ( 265- 283 (19) 40 ++ ) | |( 497- 525 (29) 9 ++ ) 644- 664 (21) 552 | 635- 659 (25) 537 ( 672- 695 (24) 266 ) | 675- 701 (27) 502 ++ ( 748- 765 (18) 473 ++ ) |( 748- 768 (21) 143 ) 3.) Suggested models for transmembrane topology These suggestions are purely speculative and should be used with extreme caution since they are based on the assumption that all transmembrane helices have been found. In most cases, the Correspondence Table shown above or the prediction plot that is also created should be used for the topology assignment of unknown proteins. 2 possible models considered, only significant TM-segments used *** the models differ in the number of TM-helices ! *** -----> STRONGLY prefered model: N-terminus outside 3 strong transmembrane helices, total score : 2523 # from to length score orientation 1 4 23 (20) 1469 o-i 2 644 664 (21) 552 i-o 3 675 701 (27) 502 o-i ------> alternative model 2 strong transmembrane helices, total score : 2269 # from to length score orientation 1 4 23 (20) 1732 i-o 2 635 659 (25) 537 o-i http://www.ch.embnet.org/cgi-bin/TMPRED_form_parser (2 of 3)1/11/2008 12:34:35 PM TMpred output for unknown You can get the prediction graphics shown above in one of the following formats: l GIF-format l Postscript-format l numerical format Back to ISREC home page http://www.ch.embnet.org/cgi-bin/TMPRED_form_parser (3 of 3)1/11/2008 12:34:35 PM min=17 | max=33 | html | OMP34 | plain_text | ATVYNQDGTKVDVNGSVRLILKKEKNERGDLVDNGSRVSFKASHDLGEGLSA LAYAELRFSTKVKKTVKEGPSQVERIGN%0D%0ADVHVKRLYAGFAYEGLGTL TFGNQLTIGDDVGVSDYTYFLGGINNLLSSGEKAINFKSAEFNGFTFGGAYVFS ADADKQA%0D%0APRDGRGFVVAGLYNRKMGDVGFALEAGYSQKYVTVAK QEKAFMVGTELSYAGLALGVDYAQSKVTNVEGKKRALEVGLNY%0D%0ADIN DKAKVYTDLIWAKGGPKGATTRDRSIILGAGYKLHKQVETFVEGGWGREKDA NGVTTKGNVVGVGLRVHF TMpred output for OMP34 [ISREC-Server] Date: Mon Jan 7 14:40:28 Europe/Zurich 2008 Sequence: ATV...VHF, length: 313 Prediction parameters: TM-helix length between 17 and 33 1.) Possible transmembrane helices The sequence positions in brackets denominate the core region. Only scores above 500 are considered significant. Inside to outside from 87 ( 89) 108 ( 133 ( 135) 156 ( 202 ( 202) 219 ( helices : 3 found to score center 108) 201 98 153) 200 143 219) 348 210 Outside to inside from 111 ( 111) 131 ( 202 ( 202) 220 ( helices : 2 found to score center 131) 246 120 220) 9 212 2.) Table of correspondences Here is shown, which of the inside->outside helices correspond to which of the outside>inside helices. Helices shown in brackets are considered insignificant. A "+"-symbol indicates a preference of this orientation. A "++"-symbol indicates a strong preference of this orientation. ( ( ( inside->outside | outside->inside 87- 108 (22) 201 ++ ) | |( 111- 131 (21) 246 ++ ) 133- 156 (24) 200 ++ ) | 202- 219 (18) 348 ++ ) |( 202- 220 (19) 9 ) 3.) Suggested models for transmembrane topology These suggestions are purely speculative and should be used with extreme caution since they are based on the assumption that all transmembrane helices have been found. In most cases, the Correspondence Table shown above or the prediction plot that is also created should be used for the topology assignment of unknown proteins. 2 possible models considered, only significant TM-segments used !!! probably no transmembrane protein - no possible model found !!! You can get the prediction graphics shown above in one of the following formats: GIF-format Postscript-format numerical format Back to ISREC home page Protein: noname Length: 313 N-terminus: IN Number of transmembrane helices: 1 Transmembrane helices: 89-108 Total entropy of the model: 17.0120 Entropy of the best path: 17.0128 The best path: seq ATVYNQDGTK VDVNGSVRLI LKKEKNERGD LVDNGSRVSF KASHDLGEGL pred IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIII 50 seq SALAYAELRF STKVKKTVKE GPSQVERIGN DVHVKRLYAG FAYEGLGTLT pred IIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIII IIIiiiiiii iiiiiiiiHH HHHHHHHHHH 100 seq FGNQLTIGDD VGVSDYTYFL GGINNLLSSG EKAINFKSAE FNGFTFGGAY pred HHHHHHHHoo oooooooooo oooOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO 150 seq VFSADADKQA PRDGRGFVVA GLYNRKMGDV GFALEAGYSQ KYVTVAKQEK pred OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO 200 seq AFMVGTELSY AGLALGVDYA QSKVTNVEGK KRALEVGLNY DINDKAKVYT pred OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO 250 seq DLIWAKGGPK GATTRDRSII LGAGYKLHKQ VETFVEGGWG REKDANGVTT pred OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOO 300 seq KGNVVGVGLR VHF pred OOOOOOOOOO OOO 313 Vita The authoress, Archana Yadav was born on April 25, 1977 in Haridwar, Uttarakhand. She passed her high school and intermediate examination with first division in 1993 and 1995, respectively, from U. P. Board. She completed her B.Sc. degree in Zoology, Botany and Chemistry with first division from C. C. S. University, Meerut in 1998. She did her M.Sc. in Microbiology with first division from Gurukul Kangri Vishwavidyalaya, Haridwar in 2000. She joined College of Basic Sciences and Humanities, G.B.P.U.A & T., Pantnagar for her Ph.D. degree in Microbiology in July 2004. She was qualified National Eligibility Test for lecturership. During her Ph.D. programme she was joined DBT project as Senior Research Fellow for a period of two years. Permanent Address: Q No. 61, Type II, Sector 4 B.H.E.L. Ranipur Haridwar Uttarakhand 249403. Email: [email protected] ABSTRACT Name : Archana Yadav Id. No. : 31741 Sem. & year of admission : 1st, Degree : Ph.D. Major : Microbiology Minor : Molecular Biology & Genetic Engineering Thesis Title : “Cloning and characterization of outer membrane protein(s) of Pasteurella multocida serotype B:2 (P52)” Advisor : 2004-05 Department : Microbiology Dr. Anita Sharma Pasteurella multocida serotype B:2 is a causative agent of Haemorrhagic septicaemia (HS), a fatal disease of cattle and buffaloes. Formalin inactivated whole cell bacterin is frequently used to prepare vaccines in India against HS. This vaccine has several limitations such as short term immunity, poor syringibility and production problem. To overcome from these problems there is an urgent need of search of a conserved immunogenic protein as vaccine candidate. Outer membrane proteins of P. multocida are reported to be immunogenic and protective. SDS-PAGE analysis of outer membrane proteins of vaccine strain P52 revealed the presence of eight polypeptides with molecular weigh ranging from 16 to 87 kDa. Antiserum raised against whole cell antigen showed positive result by agar gel immunodiffusion test. Western blot analysis revealed the presence of seven immunodominant outer membrane proteins. Out of seven, omp87 and omp34 were selected as potent antigens for further study. Primers sets were designed from available sequences in NCBI Gene Bank. Both genes (omp87 and omp34) were amplified using DNA as template by PCR. The amplified fragments were cloned in pGEMT-Easy vector. After sequencing, size of the cloned omp87 gene was assessed and found to be 2121 bp accounting for 707 amino acid residues and size of omp34 was 942 bp accounting for 313 amino acid residues. Both the sequences were analysed using online bioinformatics tools (ExPASY server). On comparison of nucleotide sequence, omp87 showed 94.8% similarity with serotype A:1 while homology at amino acid level was 95.2%. Similarly at nucleotide level 98.3% and at amino acid level 97.5% similarity has been observed in omp34. The sequences were submitted to NCBI Gene Bank and accession number EU570212 and EU162755 were obtained for omp87 and omp34 respectively. On phylogenetic analysis it was found that omp34 of serotype B:2 clustered with serotype 3,4. Probable secondary structures and number of transmembrane helices were also predicted. (Anita Sharma) Advisor (Archana Yadav) Authoress