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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, April 2004, p. 1601-1604, Vol. 42, No. 4
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.4.1601-1604.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Improved Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay Using C-Terminal Truncated Recombinant Antigens of Babesia bovis Rhoptry-Associated Protein-1 for Detection of Specific Antibodies
Suthisak Boonchit,1 Xuenan Xuan,1 Naoaki Yokoyama,1 Will L. Goff,2 Suryakant D. Waghela,3 Gale Wagner,3 and Ikuo Igarashi1*
National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, Obihiro, Hokkaido 080-8555, Japan,1
Animal Disease Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Pullman, Washington 99164,2
Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 778433
Received 14 April 2003/
Returned for modification 26 May 2003/
Accepted 8 August 2003

ABSTRACT
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) based on a recombinant
rhoptry-associated protein-1 (RAP-1) of
Babesia bovis has been
previously developed, but it was imperfect because some cross-reactions
were still present in
Babesia bigemina-infected bovine sera.
To improve its accuracy for the specific detection of the antibodies
to
B. bovis, we constructed three C-terminal truncated recombinant
antigens of the RAP-1rCT1 (amino acids [aa] 301 to 408),
rCT2 (aa 388 to 490), and rCT3 (aa 466 to 565)by using
a baculovirus expression system and evaluated their diagnostic
potentials using ELISA. rCT1 and rCT2 were better diagnostic
antigens in their sensitivities and diagnostic efficiencies
than rCT3, although none of the recombinant antigens showed
any cross-reactivity to
B. bigemina-infected bovine sera. These
results confirmed that the N-terminal 300-aa region caused cross-reactivity
of the entire RAP-1 antigen, and the C-terminal truncated recombinant
antigens were shown to be useful reagents for species-specific
serodiagnosis.

INTRODUCTION
Bovine babesiosis is an economically important tick-borne disease
of cattle in tropical and subtropical regions of the world (
8).
The disease is caused by the intraerythrocytic protozoan parasites
Babesia bovis and
Babesia bigemina. The clinical signs developed
as a result of
B. bovis and
B. bigemina infections are similar,
and they are characterized by fever, anemia, and icterus in
the infected cattle (
3). Generally, the disease caused by
B. bovis is more severe and more difficult to control than that
caused by
B. bigemina (
9). Acute infections are usually diagnosed
by microscopic examination of blood smears, whereas subclinical
infections can be identified serologically (
14). Differential
diagnosis between
B. bovis and
B. bigemina infections will lead
to a better understanding of the epidemiology with regard to
species distribution and prevalence and also will provide useful
information for disease control strategies (
3). Therefore, accurate
diagnosis of
B. bovis infection is essential for the development
of disease control measures and epidemiological surveys.
Previously, we demonstrated that the entire rhoptry-associated protein-1 (RAP-1) of B. bovis synthesized by a baculovirus expression system could be used as a diagnostic enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) antigen for the detection of antibodies to B. bovis, but there were some cross-reactions with another pathogen, B. bigemina (1). The cross-reactions may be due to the high degree of sequence identity in the first 300 amino acids (aa) located at the N-terminal region between the RAP-1 derivates of both parasites (11, 12). On the contrary, the C terminus is represented by conserved sequences that serve as B-cell epitopes that can be helpful in the development of species-specific diagnostic assays (3a). Therefore, in order to develop a more-specific serological test without cross-reactivity to B. bigemina, we constructed three truncated recombinant antigens derived from the C-terminal region of RAP-1 by the baculovirus system and then evaluated their sensitivities and specificities in ELISA.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Parasites.
The Texas strain of
B. bovis (
3b) was maintained by a microaerophilous
stationary-phase culturing system (
7).
Cloning of truncated RAP-1 genes.
B. bovis genomic DNA was isolated from the culture as described previously (1). Oligonucleotide primers were synthesized with restriction enzyme-compatible ends for the subsequent cloning to find a specific immunogenic region in C-terminal RAP-1 (Table 1). Three kinds of DNA fragments encoding various regions of C-terminal RAP-1 were amplified from the genomic DNA by PCR with the primer pairs RCT11-RCT12, RCT21-RCT22, or RCT31-RCT32 (Fig. 1). Each of the amplified DNA samples was digested with the corresponding restriction enzymes, BamHI and XhoI, and then inserted into a pBluescript SK(+) cloning vector. The PCR amplification and confirmative nucleotide sequencing of the target DNA fragments were performed as described previously (1).
Construction of recombinant baculoviruses containing a deletion series of the RAP-1 gene.
Each of the 3'-terminal RAP-1 gene fragments was subcloned into
the BamHI and XhoI sites of a baculovirus transfer vector, pFastBac
Ht (Life Technologies, Grand Island, N.Y.), and the vectors
were designated pFB/RAP-1 CT1, pFB/RAP-1 CT2, and pFB/RAP-1
CT3. By using these transfer vectors, three kinds of recombinant
viruses, AcRAP-1 CT1, AcRAP-1 CT2, and AcRAP-1 CT3, were produced,
respectively, according to the previously described method (
1).
Immunoblot analysis.
Immunoblot analysis was carried out by using the RAP-1-specific mouse immune serum (1).
ELISA.
According to the same method described previously (1), soluble lysates of the recombinant baculovirus-infected insect cells were prepared as ELISA antigens. All sera were examined by using the recombinant RAP-1 (rRAP-1) antigen (1) and three C-terminal truncated recombinant antigens, rCT1, rCT2, and rCT3. Ninety-six-well microtiter plates (Nunc, Roskilde, Denmark) were coated with 50 µl of each recombinant antigen (10 µg/ml) at 4°C overnight. The details of the ELISA procedure were described previously (1). The cutoff line was defined as the mean value plus threefold standard deviations of the optical density (OD) obtained from 30 noninfected serum samples. The following definitions were used to calculate the corresponding diagnostic parameterstrue-positive number (tp) of B. bovis-infected bovine sera showing a positive reading, false-negative number (fn) of B. bovis-infected bovine sera showing a negative reading, false-positive number (fp) of sera from healthy or B. bigemina-infected cattle showing a positive reading, true-negative number (tn) of sera from healthy or B. bigemina-infected cattle showing a negative reading: sensitivity = tp x 100/(tp + fn); specificity = tn x 100/(tn + fp); diagnostic efficiency = (tn + tp) x 100/(tp + fp + tn + fn) (4).
Sera.
Serum samples from cattle experimentally infected with B. bovis (n = 14) or B. bigemina (n = 12) and noninfected control serum samples (n = 30) from healthy cattle were kindly provided by Washington State University (Pullman) and Texas A&M University (College Station).

RESULTS
Cloning and expression of RAP-1 deletion clones.
Three 3'-terminal RAP-1 gene fragments, RAP-1 CT1 (encoding
aa 301 to 408), RAP-1 CT2 (encoding aa 388 to 490), and RAP-1
CT3 (encoding aa 466 to 565), were cloned by PCR (Fig.
1) and
inserted into the recombinant baculovirus vectors. The extracts
of recombinant baculovirus-infected insect cells with the corresponding
AcRAP-1 CT1, AcRAP-1 CT2, or AcRAP-1 CT3 were subjected to immunoblot
analysis with the anti-RAP-1-specific mouse serum. The serum
recognized the expected recombinant proteins with a molecular
mass of approximately 16 kDa in the recombinant baculovirus-infected
cell extracts, but it did not react with the noninfected cell
extract (Fig.
2). All recombinant proteins reacted with
B. bovis-infected
bovine serum but not with
B. bigemina-infected bovine serum
(data not shown). The results indicated the successful expression
of three of the recombinant proteins derived from the C-terminal
B. bovis RAP-1 in the insect cells.
Evaluation of ELISAs with rRAP-1 deletion antigens.
In order to improve the specificity of the rRAP-1 antigen, three
C-terminal truncated antigens were constructed and subjected
to ELISA, and their sensitivity and specificity were evaluated.
From the control results using 30 noninfected sera, cutoffs
for the OD at 415 nm were determined as 0.141, 0.140, 0.136,
and 0.133 for rRAP-1, rCT1, rCT2, and rCT3, respectively (Table
2). The actual reactivities of the recombinant antigens against
each group of the serum samples are shown in Fig.
3. Maximum
OD values were observed in the rRAP-1 ELISA (Fig.
3A), whereas
the absorbance decreased in the rCT1, rCT2, and rCT3 ELISAs
(Fig.
3B to D). All of the
B. bovis-infected serum samples showed
a certain positive value in the rRAP-1, rCT1, and rCT2 ELISAs
(Fig.
3A to C), but one of these samples had a lower OD value
than the defined cutoff line in the rCT3 ELISA (Fig.
3D), resulting
in sensitivities of 100% for the rRAP-1, rCT1, and rCT2 ELISAs
and 92.8% for the rCT3 ELISA (Table
2). No OD value from the
B. bigemina-infected bovine serum samples was over the cutoff
in the rCT1, rCT2, and rCT3 ELISAs (Fig.
3B to D), whereas 10
B. bigemina-infected bovine serum samples had OD values above
the cutoff in the rRAP-1 ELISA (Fig.
3A), resulting in specificities
of 100% for the rCT1, rCT2, and rCT3 ELISAs and 76.2% for the
rRAP-1 ELISA (Table
2). The diagnostic efficiency of the rCT1
and rCT2 antigens showed a perfect percentage, 100% (Table
2).
The results indicated that the ELISA with the rCT1 or rCT2 antigen
provided a highly specific and sensitive system for the serological
diagnosis of
B. bovis infection.

DISCUSSION
The effective serodiagnosis of bovine babesiosis largely depends
on the availability and quality of prepared antigens. Recombinant
protein-based serological tests may achieve high sensitivity
and specificity because of the high concentration of the immunoreactive
antigen and the lack of host protein components from the crude
antigen preparations (
2). We previously introduced a serodiagnostic
ELISA using an entire RAP-1 gene product of
B. bovis for the
detection of antibodies to
B. bovis in cattle (
1). However,
some cross-reactions remained in the
B. bigemina-infected bovine
sera, and further improvement was required. The
B. bovis RAP-1
shows a high identity to
B. bigemina RAP-1 (p58) in the N-terminal
300-aa region (
11). It has been demonstrated that the C terminus
contains conserved, repeated amino acid sequences (
13). Furthermore,
a competitive ELISA using a monoclonal antibody specific for
the repeat region of the C terminus has recently been shown
to possess diagnostic potential with exquisite specificity (
3a).
In the present study, we synthesized three C-terminal recombinant
antigens of
B. bovis RAP-1 and then evaluated whether the recombinants
were available for species-specific serodiagnosis without any
cross-reactions to
B. bigemina infection.
The present results showed that the entire recombinant antigen derived from the C-terminal region of RAP-1 had no cross-reactivity to B. bigemina-infected bovine sera, confirming that the N-terminal region of RAP-1 caused the cross-reactivity in ELISA (12). The rCT1 and rCT2 ELISAs gave satisfactory results, and their sensitivities, specificities, and diagnostic efficiencies were 100%. However, the number of bovine sera was small, and further evaluation with a large number of bovine serum samples will be necessary. The CT1 and CT2 fragments contain a large region of repeated 23-aa sequences (10). The periodicity of a tandem repeated sequence is 7 from aa 317 to 477 of RAP-1, and making a secondary structure with a predicted high antigenicity is considered necessary (10). When the same B. bovis-infected bovine sera were used, the OD values of B. bovis-infected bovine sera in the rCT1 ELISA were higher than those in the rCT2 and rCT3 ELISAs but lower than those in the rRAP-1 ELISA, indicating that rCT1 contains a larger immunodominant region capable of inducing a stronger humoral immune response to B. bovis infection than rCT2 and rCT3 but which induces a weaker response than rRAP-1. Various genes have been identified in Babesia parasites. They have been used to produce their corresponding recombinant antigens and evaluated for their diagnostic potentials in ELISA for Babesia infections (5, 6, 13, 15). The selection of target recombinants that are highly specific to the parasites is important for the development of novel serodiagnosis (2).
In conclusion, we described the construction of three truncated C-terminal recombinant antigens of B. bovis RAP-1, rCT1, rCT2, and rCT3 and evaluated their diagnostic potential in ELISA. The results of ELISA indicated that rCT1 and rCT2 are novel diagnostic antigens. These antigens are available for the serodiagnostic ELISA of B. bovis infection. This serodiagnosis will allow accurate epidemiological surveys as well.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research
from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and by a
grant from The 21st Century COE Program (A-1), Ministry of Education,
Culture, Sport, Science, and Technology, Japan.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Research Center for Protozoan Diseases, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine, 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, April 2004, p. 1601-1604, Vol. 42, No. 4
0095-1137/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.4.1601-1604.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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