Vaccines (Aug 2020)

Vaccination of Mice with a Novel Trypsin from <i>Trichinella spiralis</i> Elicits the Immune Protection against Larval Challenge

  • Yao Zhang,
  • Jie Zeng,
  • Yan Yan Song,
  • Shao Rong Long,
  • Ruo Dan Liu,
  • Peng Jiang,
  • Xi Zhang,
  • Jing Cui,
  • Zhong Quan Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines8030437
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. 437

Abstract

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Trichinella spiralis is a major foodborne parasite and has a serious threat to meat safety. Development of anti-Trichinella vaccines is prospective to eliminate Trichinella infection in food animal. The aim of this study was to assess the biological properties of a novel T. spiralis trypsin (TsT) and its elicited immune protection against larval challenge. The cDNA sequence of TsT gene was cloned and expressed. Western blotting showed rTsT was identified by infection serum and anti-TsT serum. RT-PCR results revealed that TsT gene was transcribed at diverse T. spiralis lifecycle stages. The IIFT results showed that natural TsT was principally expressed at epicuticle of 5-6 day adult worms, indicating that TsT is a worm somatic antigen and adult-stage specific surface antigen. Vaccination of mice with rTsT triggered an evident humoral immune response (high levels of serum IgG, IgG1/IgG2a, and enteral sIgA), and it also induced the systemic and enteral local cellular immune response, demonstrated by an significantly elevation of cytokines IFN-γ and IL-4. The mice vaccinated with rTsT exhibited a 33.17% reduction of enteral adult worms and a 37.80% reduction of muscle larvae after larval challenge. The results showed that TsT might be considered as a candidate target antigen for anti-T. spiralis vaccines.

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