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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2003, p. 547-551, Vol. 41, No. 2
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.2.547-551.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Identification of a Specific Antigenic Region of the P82 Protein of Babesia equi and Its Potential Use in Serodiagnosis
Haruyuki Hirata, Xuenan Xuan, Naoaki Yokoyama, Yoshifumi Nishikawa, Kozo Fujisaki, Naoyoshi Suzuki, and Ikuo Igarashi*
National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Inada-cho, Obihiro, Hokkaido 080-8555, Japan
Received 11 July 2002/
Returned for modification 21 August 2002/
Accepted 31 October 2002

ABSTRACT
The efficacy of the Be82 gene product fused with glutathione
S-transferase (GST/Be82) in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA) for the diagnosis of
Babesia equi infection was reported
previously (H. Hirata et al., J. Clin. Microbiol. 40:1470-1474,
2002). However, the ELISA with the GST/Be82 antigen cross-reacted
with
Babesia caballi-infected horse sera, despite the high rate
of detection of
B. equi. These results suggested that GST/Be82
has an antigen in common with
B. caballi or antigenicity similar
to that of
B. caballi. In the present study, we constructed
a series of five clones with deletions in the Be82 gene product,
each of which was fused with GST, and used them in ELISAs in
order to overcome the cross-reactivity seen with
B. caballi.
One of the deletion clones, a clone with a deletion of the Be82
gene from positions 236 to 381 (Be82/236-381), specifically
and sensitively detected
B. equi-infected horse sera without
cross-reactivity with
B. caballi-infected horse sera. Assays
with clones from which other gene products were deleted showed
decreased sensitivities or remained nonspecific for the detection
of
B. equi-infected horse sera. These results suggest that the
Be82/236-381 gene product is a novel antigen for the diagnosis
of
B. equi infection in horses.

INTRODUCTION
Equine piroplasmosis is an economically important tick-borne
protozoan disease of horses that has been reported worldwide.
The disease is caused by blood parasites named
Babesia equi and
Babesia caballi (
9).
Babesia parasites destroy host erythrocytes
and induce fever, anemia, and icterus in infected horses (
6).
These parasites are usually detectable in blood smears only
during the acute stage of the infection. In contrast, horses
that recover from disease continue to be parasite carriers,
and these carriers as well as previously exposed animals should
be identified serologically (
3). Japan is considered free of
equine piroplasmosis, but the number of imported horses has
increased recently. Therefore, it is urgent that a highly specific
and sensitive system for the diagnosis of equine piroplasmosis
be developed to avoid the introduction of infected or carrier
horses into Japan.
We recently reported on the efficacy of the Be82 gene product with glutathione S-transferase (GST/Be82) in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the diagnosis of B. equi infection (4). The ELISA with the Be82 gene antigen was shown to be highly specific only for B. equi antibodies when a cutoff value was set at a relatively high level (4). Although the number of serum samples tested was insufficient to evaluate whether the cross-reactivity of the GST/Be82 antigen with B. caballi-infected sera was authentic, there was a possibility that the B. equi Be82 protein might have an antigen in common with B. caballi or have antigenicity similar to that of B. caballi. Therefore, in this study we constructed a deletion series of the Be82 gene products and evaluated their sensitivities and specificities in ELISAs for the diagnosis of B. equi infection in horses.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Construction of clones with Be82 deletions.
The Be82 gene was previously isolated and subcloned into the
pGEX-4T-3 (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Little Chalfont, England)
or pGEMEX-2 (Promega Corp., Madison, Wis.) vector (
4). These
plasmids were designated pGEX-4T-3/Be82 and pGEMEX-2/Be82, respectively.
pGEX-4T-3/Be82 was digested with
NruI and
XhoI or
NdeI and
XhoI
and then blunt ended with the Klenow fragment (Takara, Tokyo,
Japan), followed by self-ligation with a ligation kit (Takara).
The resultant plasmids were designated pGEX/Be82/1-235 and pGEX/Be82/1-544,
respectively (Fig.
1). On the other hand, pGEMEX-2/Be82 was
subjected to the generation of clones with deletions at the
3' end by using a deletion kit (Takara), and three deletion
clones were obtained. After digestion of each deletion clone
with
EcoRI and
NotI, the deleted inserts were subcloned into
the corresponding sites of pGEX-4T-3 in order to obtain pGEX/Be82/1-532,
pGEX/Be82/1-477, and pGEX/Be82/1-381. The resultant inserts
of these plasmids were checked by restriction enzyme analyses
and sequenced with an ABI PRISM 3100 DNA sequencer (Perkin-Elmer,
Foster, Calif.) with a big dye primer cycle sequencing ready
reaction kit (Perkin-Elmer). Furthermore, plasmids pGEX/Be82/1-532,
pGEX/Be82/1-477, and pGEX/Be82/1-381 were digested with
BamHI
and
NruI, blunt ended with the Klenow fragment, and then self-ligated
to obtain pGEX/Be82/236-532, pGEX/Be82/236-477, and pGEX/Be82/236-381,
respectively (Fig.
1). Nucleic acid and protein homology searches
were performed with the MacVector program (Oxford Molecular,
Ltd., Oxford, United Kingdom) and the National Center for Biotechnology
Information database.
Expression of Be82 genes with deletions in E. coli.
Plasmids pGEX/Be82, pGEX/Be82/1-235, pGEX/Be82/1-544, pGEX/Be82/236-532,
pGEX/Be82/236-477, and pGEX/Be82/236-381 and control plasmid
pGEX-4T-3 were used to transform competent strain
Escherichia coli BL21 (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) by standard techniques
(
8). After the transformation, these genes were expressed as
glutathione
S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins (GST/Be82, GST/Be82/1-544,
GST/Be82/236-532, GST/Be82/236-477, GST/Be82/236-381, GST/Be82/1-235,
and control GST, respectively). The purification of all proteins
was performed as described previously (
4,
10).
SDS-PAGE analysis.
Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis of the purified proteins was done as described previously (13).
ELISA.
Ninety-six-well microtitration plates (Nunc-Immuno Plate; Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated overnight at 4°C with 50 µl (0.5 ng/µl) of the purified series of proteins with GST/Be82 deletions or the GST protein as the control. ELISAs with these purified proteins were performed as described previously (4, 5, 12).
Data analysis.
For all tests an optical density at 415 nm (OD415) of 0.2 was defined as the cutoff value. OD415 readings above the cutoff value were considered positive. Sera from B. equi-infected horse with positive ELISA readings were considered true positives, and those with negative readings were considered false negatives, whereas sera from uninfected horses or B. caballi-infected horse with positive readings were considered false positives, and those with negative readings were considered true negatives. The following definitions were used to calculate the corresponding diagnostic parameters: sensitivity, tp x 100/(tp + fn); specificity, tn x 100/(tn + fp); and diagnostic efficiency, (tn + tp) x 100/(tp + fp + tn + fn), where tp is the number of samples with true-positive results, fn is the number of samples with false-negative results, fp is the number of samples with false-positive results, and tn is the number of samples with true-negative results (1, 2).
Serum samples.
Ten serum samples from uninfected horses, 13 serum samples from horses experimentally infected with B. equi, and 9 serum samples from horses experimentally infected with B. caballi were used for the ELISA. All experimental horse sera were collected from 30 days to 2 years after infection. The Equine Research Institute of the Japan Racing Association kindly donated all sera. They were kept at -80°C until use in the ELISA.

RESULTS
Construction and expression of a series of clones with deletions in the B. equi Be82 gene.
The Be82 gene was isolated from a
B. equi cDNA library and identified
as a truncated open reading frame of 1,907 bp comprising 634
amino acid residues (
4). Four kinds of relatively conserved
sequences were found to exist on the amino acid sequence of
Be82, with tandemly repeated 19-residue periodicities occurring
between amino acids 257 and 484 (Fig.
2). These four groups
were arranged so that group 1 initiated the arrangement, groups
2 and 3 followed with five times the number of reduplications
from amino acids 277 to 466, and group 4 ended the arrangement
(Fig.
1). Five deletion clones were obtained by using a deletion
kit. The resultant Be82 genes with deletions, Be82 with deletions
from positions 1 to 544 (Be82/1-544), Be82/236-532, Be82/236-477,
Be82/236-381, and Be82/1-235, consisted of 1,636, 893, 725,
438, and 706 bp, respectively (Fig.
1).
Six kinds of gene products, GST/Be82, GST/Be82/1-544, GST/Be82/236-532,
GST/Be82/236-477, GST/Be82/236-381, and GST/Be82/1-235, were
purified and observed by SDS-PAGE analysis to have molecular
sizes of 136, 127, 99, 82, 55, and 54 kDa, respectively (Fig.
3). All of these gene products contained a GST tag with a molecular
size of 26 kDa. The entire GST/Be82 gene product was larger
than the estimated size, as determined by computer-aided analysis
as described previously (
4). The molecular sizes of the gene
products from the GST/Be82/1-544, GST/Be82/236-532, GST/Be82/236-477,
and GST/Be82/236-381 deletion clones calculated by SDS-PAGE
analyses were still larger than those calculated by computer-aided
analysis. The discrepancies in molecular sizes decreased when
the amino acid of Be82 was deleted from the C terminus. On the
other hand, the molecular size of the GST/Be82/1-235 gene product
was the same as that estimated by computer-aided analysis.
Evaluation of ELISAs with a deletion series of the Be82 gene products.
In order to improve the specificity of the GST/Be82 protein,
all of the deletion antigens constructed were subjected to ELISA,
and their sensitivities and specificities were evaluated. The
reactivities of the GST/Be82, GST/Be82/1-544, GST/Be82/236-532,
GST/Be82/236-477, GST/Be82/236-381, and GST/Be82/1-235 antigens
with each of the serum samples in the ELISAs are shown in Fig.
4 and Table
1. The sensitivity of the ELISA with the GST/Be82/1-235
antigen was decreased in comparison to that of the ELISA with
the GST/Be82 antigen, although its specificity was high. The
sensitivities of the ELISAs with the GST/Be82/1-544 and GST/Be82/236-531
antigens were increased for all horse sera compared with that
of the ELISA with the GST/Be82 antigen; however, the specificities
of the ELISAs with those antigens were decreased. The ELISA
with the GST/Be82/236-477 antigen had a higher sensitivity and
a relatively higher specificity in comparison to those of the
ELISA with the GST/Be82 antigen. On the other hand, among the
ELISAs with the series of six GST/Be82 antigens, the ELISA with
the GST/Be82/236-381 antigen showed the highest sensitivity
and specificity. These results indicate that the ELISA with
the GST/Be82/236-381 antigen provided a highly specific and
sensitive system for the diagnosis of
B. equi infection.

DISCUSSION
We previously isolated a Be82 cDNA clone of 1,953 bp by immunoscreening
B. equi-infected horse serum (
4). The Be82 gene has a 1,907-bp
truncated open reading frame lacking the 5'-terminal sequence.
Furthermore, an ELISA with a GST/Be82 antigen proved to be highly
sensitive for
B. equi antibodies, but it suggested that the
Be82 gene shares a region that causes a cross-reaction with
B. caballi-infected horse sera (
4). Therefore, it was necessary
to determine the region in the GST/Be82 antigen specific for
B. equi to avoid nonspecific reactions as much as possible.
In the present study, we constructed a series of five clones
with deletions in the Be82 gene product, each of which was fused
with GST, and used it in ELISAs in order to overcome the cross-reaction
against
B. caballi. We developed a novel ELISA with the GST/Be82/236-381
antigen, and it proved to have a higher specificity and a higher
sensitivity for
B. equi antibodies than those of the ELISA with
the complete GST/Be82 antigen.
The molecular size of GST/Be82 was found to be about 40 kDa larger than the theoretically calculated size (4). These discrepancies in molecular size were gradually reduced when the C terminus of the amino acid sequence of Be82 was deleted. Furthermore, the discrepancies in the molecular sizes of the GST/Be82/1-235 protein disappeared. These results indicated that the discrepancies in molecular sizes were caused by the presence of the highly conserved and charged region between amino acids 257 and 484 (Fig. 1). Similar findings have been reported for the pf322 gene of Plasmodium falciparum and the 200-kDa protein of Babesia bigemina (7, 11).
We observed that purified fractions of all recombinant antigens had contaminants (Fig. 3). In the ELISAs, however, none of the antigens had nonspecific reactivity with normal horse sera. Furthermore, among the three antigens GST/Be82/1-544, GST/Be82/1-235, and GST/Be82/236-532, GST/Be82/1-544 and GST/Be82/236-532 showed cross-reactivities with B. caballi-infected horse sera similar to that of the Be82 antigen and GST/Be82/1-235 showed the lowest level of specific reactivity to all three groups of horse sera evaluated in the present study. These results suggest that the cross-reactivity of the ELISA with B. caballi-infected horse sera is mainly caused by the region from amino acids 236 to 532 of Be82. This possibility was further confirmed by the fact that GST/Be82/236-381 showed the highest level of specific reactivity to B. equi-infected horse sera in the ELISAs with GST/Be82/236-477 and GST/Be82/236-381, which were made by deletion of amino acids from the C terminus of GST/Be82/236-532. Therefore, we concluded that the region between amino acids 236 and 381 has a highly immunodominant region with antigenicity for B. equi and that another region between amino acids 382 and 532 causes a cross-reaction with B. caballi-infected horse sera. Further analysis such as whether the conserved region between amino acids 382 and 532 of Be82 may be highly charged and cause changes in the three-dimensional structure will be required to determine the reason for the cross-reactivity of this region.
In conclusion, we have provided convincing data demonstrating the specificity of the GST/Be82/236-381 protein in the detection of B. equi infection. This highly specific recombinant protein shows promise for use in the diagnosis of B. equi infection by ELISA.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank T. Kanemaru of the Equine Research Institute of the
Japan Racing Association for providing horse sera.
This study was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (A) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and by a grant of Gakujutsu-Frontier Cooperative Research in Rakuno-Gakuen University.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Nishi 2-13, Inada-cho, Obihiro, Hokkaido 080-8555, Japan. Phone: 81-155-49-5641 Fax: 81-155-49-5643. E-mail:
igarcpmi{at}obihiro.ac.jp.


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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2003, p. 547-551, Vol. 41, No. 2
0095-1137/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.41.2.547-551.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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