Toxins (Sep 2020)

Camelid VHH Antibodies that Neutralize Botulinum Neurotoxin Serotype E Intoxication or Protease Function

  • Jacqueline M. Tremblay,
  • Edwin Vazquez-Cintron,
  • Kwok-Ho Lam,
  • Jean Mukherjee,
  • Daniela Bedenice,
  • Celinia A. Ondeck,
  • Matthieu T. Conroy,
  • Skylar M. L. Bodt,
  • Brittany M. Winner,
  • Robert P. Webb,
  • Konstantin Ichtchenko,
  • Rongsheng Jin,
  • Patrick M. McNutt,
  • Charles B. Shoemaker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins12100611
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 611

Abstract

Read online

Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) serotype E is one of three serotypes that cause the preponderance of human botulism cases and is a Tier 1 Select Agent. BoNT/E is unusual among BoNT serotypes for its rapid onset and short duration of intoxication. Here we report two large panels of unique, unrelated camelid single-domain antibodies (VHHs) that were selected for their ability to bind to BoNT/E holotoxin and/or to the BoNT/E light chain protease domain (LC/E). The 19 VHHs which bind to BoNT/E were characterized for their subunit specificity and 8 VHHs displayed the ability to neutralize BoNT/E intoxication of neurons. Heterodimer antitoxins consisting of two BoNT/E-neutralizing VHHs, including one heterodimer designed using structural information for simultaneous binding, were shown to protect mice against co-administered toxin challenges of up to 500 MIPLD50. The 22 unique VHHs which bind to LC/E were characterized for their binding properties and 9 displayed the ability to inhibit LC/E protease activity. Surprisingly, VHHs selected on plastic-coated LC/E were virtually unable to recognize soluble or captured LC/E while VHHs selected on captured LC/E were poorly able to recognize LC/E coated to a plastic surface. This panel of anti-LC/E VHHs offer insight into BoNT/E function, and some may have value as components of therapeutic antidotes that reverse paralysis following BoNT/E exposures.

Keywords