CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of Invention:
[0002] The present invention relates to novel proteins from
Piscirickettsia salmonis. The present invention also pertains to the nucleic acids that encode these proteins.
The present invention further relates to a process of preparing a vaccine against
salmonid rickettsial septicemia (SRS) using the proteins as antigens, or the nucleic
acids in bacterial hosts to express such antigens. The present invention also relates
to bacterins and viral antigens that can be combined to form a vaccine against SRS.
The present invention also pertains to vaccines for preventing SRS, as well as preventing
other bacterial and/or viral infections in fish.
Background:
[0003] Salmonid rickettsial septicemia (SRS), also known as piscirickettsiosis, is a fatal
disease in salmonids. Although the etiological agent for SRS was identified in the
late 1980's as
Piscirickettsia salmonis, antibiotics proved to be an unsuccessful treatment, due, at least in part, to the
intracellular nature of this bacterium [
Bravo and Campos, FHS/AFS Newsl. 17:3 (1989);
U.K. Patent Application 2 356 632]. As a consequence of the lack of a viable treatment, millions of farmed salmon die
of SRS each year just in southern Chile alone [
Smith et al., Dis. Aquat. Organ. 37(3):165-172 (1999)]. In addition, recent reports demonstrate a link between
Piscirickettsia-like bacteria and disease syndromes in non-salmonid fish [see,
Mauel and Miller, Veterin. Microbiol. 87(4):279-289 (2002)].
[0004] The Salmonidae family (salmonids) includes salmon, trout, char, and whitefish. Salmonids
serve both as a food source and as a game fish. Moreover, in countries such as Chile,
Norway, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the United States, salmonids have
become an important commercial product due, at least in part, to the ability of fish
farmers to artificially spawn, incubate and raise the salmonids in captivity.
[0005] Unlike fish originating in the wild, those raised in captivity are amenable to prophylactic
treatments such as vaccination. So far, several potential vaccines have been described,
such as one based on a specific
Piscirickettsia salmonis antigen, a 17 kDa lipoprotein OspA [
U.K. Patent Application 2 356 632;
see also WO 01/68865 A2]. Additional potential vaccines against
Piscirickettsia salmonis are described by
WO05035558 A2 and
WO2006037383 A1. These published international patent applications describe an isolated
Piscirickettsia salmonis Psp45 protein and antigenic fragments thereof, as well as other SRS antigens.
[0006] The nucleotide coding sequence of the
Psp45 protein is included within SEQ ID NO: 16. The amino acid sequence of the
Psp45 protein within the deposited recombinant
Yersinia ruckeri is SEQ ID NO: 7 [the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 8 is identical to that of
SEQ ID NO: 7, except SEQ ID NO: 8 lacks the sequence for the signal peptide.]
[0007] Patent application
WO 2004/006953 relates to vaccines for the protection of fish against P. salmonis, that comprise
Anthrobacter cells and optionally a P. salmonis antigen. This publication is silent
about
psP
190 and
psP
290.
[0008] A publication by
Wilhelm, V. et al., in Vaccine 24: 5083-5091 (2006) identifies Hsp60, Hsp70 and FlgP as possible antigens suitable for use in vaccines
for the protection of fish against P. salmonis. Wilhelm, V. et al., are silent about
psP
190 and
psP
290.
[0009] In addition to
Piscirickettsia salmonis, other pathogens are known to cause disease in farmed fish, including salmon. One
such pathogen is the Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis virus (IPN virus), which is an
unenveloped, icosahedral, bisegmented dsRNA virus. The IPN virus contains one main
structural protein, VP2 (52 kDa) and three additional proteins, VP1 (90 kDa), VP3
(30 kDa) and VP4 (28 kDa). VP2 is the main protein of the outer capsid and is therefore
immunologically important in recognition and bonding of the virus. VP1 is thought
to be a polymerase, whereas VP3 and VP4 are internal proteins. VP4 is believed to
correspond to a form of VP3 fragment formed during viral differentiation [see,
WO 02/38770 A1. Nucleotide and amino acid sequences for VP2 and VP3 have been determined [see,
Havarstein et al., J. Gen.Virol. 71:299-308 (1990);
Pryde et al., Archives of Vir. 129:287-293 (1992)].
[0010] There, therefore remains a need to provide new safe and effective vaccines against
Piscirickettsia salmonis. In addition, there remains a need to identify new antigens from
Piscirickettsia salmonis that can be used in such vaccines. Furthermore, there is a need to obtain nucleic
acids that encode such antigens. In addition, there is a need to provide methods of
vaccinating fish to protect them from
Piscirickettsia salmonis and
Piscirickettsia-like bacteria. Furthermore, there is a need to provide vaccines that can protect
fish against
Piscirickettsia salmonis and other unrelated pathogens, particularly those of commercial importance, such
as the IPN virus.
[0011] The citation of any reference herein should not be construed as an admission that
such reference is available as "prior art" to the instant application.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012] The present invention provides an isolated, recombinant, or both isolated and recombinant
protein from
Piscirickettsia salmonis, as well as antigenic fragments thereof. The protein of the invention is
Psp
190, a 90kDa protein (ORF1), as described below. Another 90kDa protein
Psp
290, (ORF2) is described below.
Psp
190 and
Psp
290 can be expressed from any suitable nucleic acid that encodes one or both of them,
respectively,
e.g., either DNA or RNA. In addition,
Psp
190 or
Psp
290 can be used as antigens in vaccines against SRS, either alone, or in combination
with each other and/or other antigens.
[0013] The present invention further provides nucleic acids that encode the isolated and/or
recombinant protein from
Piscirickettsia salmonis and/or antigenic fragments of the protein. Furthermore, the present invention provides
nucleotide probes and PCR primers that can be used,
e.g., to identify such nucleic acids that encode the protein of the invention. In addition,
the present invention provides recombinant vectors that encode the
Piscirickettsia salmonis protein of the present invention, or fragments thereof, such as recombinant viruses
and bacteria. Corresponding attenuated or killed recombinant bacteria,
e.g., bacterins prepared from the recombant bacterial vectors are also provided.
[0014] The present invention further provides vaccines that comprise
Piscirickettsia salmonis proteins of the present invention and/or antigenic fragments of these antigens. These
antigens may be placed into a vaccine in any number of forms including as a recombinant
protein itself, and/or as a recombinant protein expressed by a recombinant vector
such as a recombinant gram negative bacterium, or as a naked DNA. In a particular
embodiment of the present invention, the recombinant gram negative bacterium is a
recombinant
E. coli cell
.
[0015] Preferably the recipient of a vaccine of the present invention receives protection
from
Piscirickettsia salmonis. In one embodiment, the vaccine comprises recombinant
E.coli that encode and express the
Psp
190 and optionally
Psp
290 proteins and/or antigenic fragments of the
Psp
190 and optionally
Psp
290 protein. In a particular embodiment of this type, such recombinant
E.coli are inactivated prior to being added to the vaccine and/or prior to the administration
of the vaccine to the animal subject. In addition, booster vaccines are also provided
by the present invention.
[0016] Antibodies that bind to the
Piscirickettsia salmonis proteins of the present invention are also provided. Such antibodies can be used:
to demonstrate the presence of, identify, and/or purify the proteins of the present
invention.
[0017] Accordingly, the present invention provides a
Psp
190 protein that comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 75% identity
with the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. In another embodiment of this type the
Psp
190 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 90% identity with
the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. In still another embodiment of this type
the
Psp
190 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 95% identity with
the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0018] In yet another embodiment of this type the
Psp
190 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising SEQ ID NO: 2 that comprises
one or more conservative amino acid substitutions. In still another embodiment the
Psp
190 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising SEQ ID NO: 2 that comprises
one to ten amino acid substitutions. In a particular embodiment of this type the
Psp
190 protein comprises an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2 that comprises one to
ten conservative amino acid substitutions. In a specific embodiment, the
Psp
190 protein comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. In another embodiment,
the
Psp
190 protein consists essentially of the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.
P. salmonis variants of the
Psp
190 protein that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2 are also included
as part of the present invention.
[0019] Preferably, all of the
Psp
190 proteins of the present invention bind to an antibody elicited by the
Psp
190 protein that has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. More preferably, when
a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention is included as an antigen in a vaccine administered
to salmonids, the vaccine provides protection against SRS to the vaccinated salmonids.
[0020] Also described is a
Psp
290 protein that comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 60% identity
with the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. In particular the
Psp
290 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 75% identity with
the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. More particularly the
Psp
290 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 90% identity with
the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. More particularly the
Psp
290 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising at least 95% identity with
the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4.
[0021] It is described herein that the
Psp
290 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising SEQ ID NO: 4 that comprises
one or more conservative amino acid substitutions. In particular the
Psp
290 protein comprises an amino acid sequence comprising SEQ ID NO: 4 that comprises
one to ten amino acid substitutions. More particularly the
Psp
290 protein comprises an amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4 that comprises one to
ten conservative amino acid substitutions. More particularly the
Psp
290 protein comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. More particularly the
Psp
290 protein consists essentially of the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4.
P. salmonis variants of the
Psp
290 protein that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4 are also included
as part of the present invention.
[0022] Preferablv. all of the
Psp
290 proteins bind to an antibody elicited by the
Psp
290 protein that has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. More preferably, when
a
Psp
290 protein is included as an antigen in a vaccine administered to salmonids, the vaccine
provides protection against SRS to the vaccinated salmonids.
[0023] The present invention also provides antigenic fragments of all of the
P. salmonis protein of the present invention. In a particular embodiment, the antigenic fragment
is of the
Psp
190 protein having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. Also described is that
the antigenic fragment is of the
Psp
290 protein having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. The antigenic fragments
of the present invention can be in any form including but not limited to: isolated,
recombinant, chemically synthesized, both recombinant and isolated, or both chemically
synthesized and isolated.
[0024] The present invention further provides chimeric polypeptides that comprise a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention or antigenic fragment thereof, and optionally
a
Psp
290 protein or antigenic fragment thereof. In one such embodiment, the chimeric polypeptide
comprises the
Psp
190 protein having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. Also described is that
the chimeric polypeptide comprises the
Psp
290 protein having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. In another embodiment,
the chimeric polypeptide comprises an antigenic fragment of a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention that has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO:
2. Also described is that the chimeric polypeptide comprises an antigenic fragment
of the
Psp
290 protein that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. The chimeric polypeptides
of the present invention can be in any form including but not limited to: isolated,
recombinant, chemically synthesized, both recombinant and isolated, or both chemically
synthesized and isolated.
[0025] The present invention further provides antibodies elicited by the
Psp
190 protein of the present invention, including those elicited by a chimeric polypeptide
of the present invention. In one embodiment, the antibody is solicited by the
Psp
190 protein having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0026] The present invention also provides antibodies solicited by an antigenic fragment
of a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention. In one such embodiment, the antibody is solicited
by an antigenic fragment of a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0027] In another aspect of the present invention, nucleic acids are provided which encode:
the
Psp
190 proteins, the
Psp
290 proteins, the antigenic fragments of these
Psp
190 proteins and/or
Psp
290 proteins, and/or the corresponding chimeric polypeptides of the present invention.
Any of these nucleic acids can further comprise heterologous nucleotide sequences.
The nucleic acids of the present invention can be in any form including but not limited
to: isolated, recombinant, chemically synthesized, both recombinant and isolated,
or both chemically synthesized and isolated.
[0028] In a particular embodiment, a nucleic acid of the present invention encodes a
Psp
190 protein that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. In a particular
embodiment of this type the nucleic acid comprises the nucleotide sequence of SEQ
ID NO: 1. In an alternative embodiment the nucleic acid comprises the nucleotide sequence
of SEQ ID NO: 5.
[0029] Also described is a nucleic that encodes a
Psp
290 protein that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. In particular the
nucleic acid comprises the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3. More particularly
the nucleic acid comprises the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 6.
[0030] The present invention also provides nucleic acids (e.g., DNA molecules) of 18 nucleotides
or more that hybridize under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having the
nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1. In a particular embodiment, the nucleic acid
comprises 120 nucleotides or more and hybridizes under stringent conditions with the
nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1. In another embodiment,
the nucleic acid comprises 300 nucleotides or more and hybridizes under stringent
conditions with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1. In
still another embodiment, the nucleic acid comprises 900 nucleotides or more and hybridizes
under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of
SEQ ID NO: 1. In yet another embodiment the nucleic acid comprises between 2000 to
3000 nucleotides and hybridizes under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having
the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1. In a related embodiment, the DNA molecule
encodes a
Psp
190 protein and hybridizes under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having
the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1.
[0031] Also described are nucleic acids (
e.g., DNA molecules) of 18 nucleotides or more that hybridize under stringent conditions
with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3. In particular
the nucleic acid comprises 120 nucleotides or more and hybridizes under stringent
conditions with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3. More
particularly the nucleic acid comprises 300 nucleotides or more and hybridizes under
stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID
NO: 3. More particularly the nucleic acid comprises 900 nucleotides or more and hybridizes
under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide sequence of
SEQ ID NO: 3. More particularly the nucleic acid comprises between 1500 to 2600 nucleotides
and hybridizes under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having the nucleotide
sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3. Also described is that the DNA molecule encodes a
Psp
290 protein and hybridizes under stringent conditions with the nucleic acid having
the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3.
[0032] The present invention also provides vectors that comprise one or more of the nucleic
acids of the present invention. In one embodiment of this type, the vector is an expression
vector. Preferably the nucleic acids of the present invention are operatively linked
to a transcriptional control sequence in the expression vectors.
[0033] The expression vectors of the present invention can be used to express one or more
Psp
190 proteins, antigenic fragments of the
Psp
190 proteins and optionally
Psp
290 proteins, and/or corresponding chimeric polypeptides. In one such embodiment, the
expression vector is a plasmid that can function in
E. coli. In a particular embodiment, the expression vector is the EGT1 plasmid. In one such
embodiment, the expression vector is an EGT1 plasmid that expresses
Psp
190 that has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, and which has the BCCM accession
No. LMBP 5690. Also described is that the expression vector is an EGT1 plasmid that
expresses
Psp
290 that has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4, and which has the BCCM accession
No. LMBP 5691.
[0034] The present invention further provides host cells that comprise the vectors of the
present invention. In a particular embodiment, the host cell expresses one or more
Psp
190 proteins, antigenic fragments of the
Psp
190 proteins and optionally
Psp
290 proteins, and/or corresponding chimeric polypeptides. In one embodiment the host
cell comprises a plasmid that expresses
Psp
190 that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. In a particular embodiment
of this type, the plasmid is an EGT1 plasmid that has the BCCM accession No. LMBP
5690. Also described is that the host cell comprises a plasmid that expresses
Psp
290 that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. In a particular embodiment
of this type, the plasmid is an EGT1 plasmid that has the BCCM accession No. LMBP
5691. Preferably, the host cell is an
E. coli cell.
[0035] The present invention also provides methods for expressing and/or producing a one
or more
Psp
190 proteins, antigenic fragments of the
Psp
190 proteins and optionally
Psp
290 proteins, and/or corresponding chimeric polypeptides. One such embodiment is culturing
a host cell of the present invention in a culture medium. In a particular embodiment,
the method further comprises isolating the
Psp
190 protein(s), antigenic fragment(s) of the
Psp
190 protein(s) and optionally
Psp
290 protein(s), and/or corresponding chimeric polypeptide(s). In one such embodiment,
the host cell is an
E.
coli cell. In a particular embodiment the host cell comprises a EGT1 plasmid that expresses
Psp
190 that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2. In a particular embodiment
of this type, the plasmid is an EGT1 plasmid that has the BCCM accession No. LMBP
5690. Also described is that the host cell comprises a EGT1 plasmid that expresses
Psp
290 that comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4. In particular the plasmid
is an EGT1 plasmid that has the BCCM accession No. LMBP 5691.
[0036] In another aspect of the present invention, immunogenic compositions are provided
comprising the proteins, and/or antigenic fragments, and/or recombinant host cells,
and/or bacterins of the present invention. In a preferred embodiment of this type,
an immunogenic composition of the present invention is a vaccine. Accordingly, the
vaccines of the present invention can comprise any of the immunogenic compositions
of the present invention. Preferred vaccines protect fish against SRS, either alone
or in multivalent vaccines that may also protect against other pathogens. In a related
embodiment, a vaccine is a naked DNA vaccine that comprises a recombinant DNA vector
that comprises an antigen of the present invention or an antigenic fragment thereof.
[0037] Immunogenic compositions of the present invention comprise antigenically effective
amounts of a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention and/or of an antigenic fragment thereof; and/or
antigenically effective amounts of a mixture of a
Psp
190 protein of the present invention and/or of an antigenic fragment thereof and a
Psp
290 protein of the present invention and/or of an antigenic fragment thereof.
[0038] In a particular embodiment, the immunogenic composition comprises a bacterin that
comprises the plasmid having the BCCM accession No. LMBP 5690. In another embodiment,
the the immunogenic composition comprises both a bacterin that comprises the plasmid
having the BCCM accession No. LMBP 5690 and a bacterin that comprises the plasmid
having the BCCM accession No. LMBP 5691.
[0039] The vaccines of the present invention can further include an adjuvant. Various adjuvants
may be used to increase the immunological response, depending on the host species,
including but not limited to Freund's (complete and incomplete), mineral gels such
as aluminum hydroxide, surface active substances such as lysolecithin, pluronic polyols,
polyanions, peptides, oil emulsions, keyhole limpet hemocyanins, and dinitrophenol.
[0040] A vaccine and/or immunogenic composition of the present invention can further comprise
one or more additional
P. salmonis proteins or an antigenic fragment thereof. In one such embodiment the
P. salmonis protein is the
Ps45 protein. In a particular embodiment of this type, the
Ps45 protein can comprise the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 8.
[0041] In another embodiment, a vaccine of the present invention further comprises one or
more antigens obtained from an Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis (IPN) virus. These recombinant
proteins are preferably expressed by transformed yeast,
Pichia pastoris. In one such embodiment, the antigen obtained from the IPN virus is the VP2 var protein
or antigenic fragment thereof. In another embodiment the antigen obtained from the
IPN virus is the VP3 protein or antigenic fragment thereof. In a preferred embodiment,
the vaccine comprises both the VP2 var protein or antigenic fragment thereof and the
VP3 protein or antigenic fragment thereof.
[0042] In still another embodiment a vaccine of the present invention comprises one or more
antigens obtained from
Aeromonas salmonicida. In a particular embodiment, the
Aeromonas salmonicida comprising the antigens is prepared from a culture grown under iron-depleted conditions.
In another embodiment, the
Aeromonas salmonicida comprising the antigens is prepared from a culture grown under iron-supplemented
conditions. In a preferred embodiment, two sets of
Aeromonas salmonicida antigens are employed in the vaccine, one set from a culture grown under iron-depleted
conditions the other set from a culture grown under iron-supplemented conditions.
In a particular embodiment, a multivalent vaccine comprises antigens from
Piscirickettsia salmonis, IPN, and
Aeromonas salmonicida.
[0043] The present invention also provides methods of protecting a fish from salmonid rickettsial
septicemia (SRS), or SRS along with one or more other pathogenic disease(s) through
the vaccination of the fish with a vaccine of the present invention. In a particular
embodiment the other disease is Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis. In another embodiment
the other disease is furunculosis. In still another embodiment the method of protecting
the fish includes protecting against SRS, Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis, and furunculosis
(caused by
Aeromonas salmonicida).
[0044] The vaccines of the present invention can be administered by any method. In one embodiment
a vaccine of the present invention is administered by immersion. In another embodiment
a vaccine of the present invention is administered by injection. In yet another embodiment
a vaccine of the present invention is administered by oral administration.
[0045] In addition, related booster vaccines are also provided by the present invention.
The administration of a given booster vaccine is preferably performed through oral
administration.
[0046] Any fish may be the recipient of the vaccines of the present invention. Examples
of recipient fish are listed below. In a particular embodiment, the fish is a teleost.
In a preferred embodiment, the telost is a salmonid. In a more preferred embodiment
the salmonid is a salmon. In one such embodiment the salmon is a
Salmo salar (Atlantic salmon). In another embodiment the salmon is an
Oncorhynchus kisutch (coho salmon). In yet another embodiment the salmonid is an
Oncorhynchus mykiss (rainbow trout).
[0047] Accordingly, it is a principal object of the present invention to provide a vaccine
that protects salmonids against SRS.
[0048] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a vaccine that protects
fish from salmonid rickettsial septicemia (SRS) and Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis
(IPN).
[0049] It is a further object of the present invention to provide an effective way to protect
against assorted fish infections by providing a multivalent vaccine.
[0050] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a protocol that can lead
to the successful vaccination of fish in captivity.
[0051] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a DNA construct that encodes
the
Psp
190 protein or variant thereof.
[0052] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a polypeptide having an
amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, or an antigenic fragment thereof.
[0053] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a recombinant subunit
vaccine against SRS.
[0054] It is a further object of the present invention to provide inactivated recombinant
bacterial vectors encoding specific antigens to be used in vaccines against SRS.
[0055] These and other aspects of the present invention will be better appreciated by reference
to the following drawings and Detailed Description.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0056] Figure 1 illustrates the cumulative percent mortality in different test groups of
fish after vaccination. The curves show the results of the saline controls denoted
by diamonds, the adjuvant controls denoted by squares, the 90 kDa ORF 1 [
Psp
190] vaccine denoted by triangles, and the 90 kDa ORF 2 [
Psp
290] vaccine denoted by "X"'s.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0057] The present invention provides safe and effective vaccines to protect fish against
Piscirickettsia salmonis infections. In addition, the present invention provides methods of vaccinating fish
to protect them from
Piscirickettsia salmonis and
Piscirickettsia-like bacteria. Moreover, the present invention provides vaccines that can protect
vaccinated fish from
Piscirickettsia salmonis and other unrelated pathogens, such as the IPN virus. Methods of making the vaccines
of the present invention are also provided. The vaccines of the present invention
(including booster vaccines) can be administered to fish by a number of means including
by immersion, by injection, and/or through oral administration.
[0058] Notably, US Published Patent Application No.
US20070207165 (A1) and
WO2006037383(A1) specifically teach the use a recombinant
Yersinia ruckeri vector to express
P. salmonis proteins, and indeed, exemplify the successful use of
Yersinia ruckeri to express the
Psp45 protein. However, after considerable time and effort,
Yersinia ruckeri proved to be an inappropriate host cell for expressing either
Psp
190 or
Psp
290 due both to instability, and the inability to demonstrate expression of these proteins.
Surprisingly, and contrary to the earlier teachings of
US20070207165 (A1) and
WO2006037383(A1),
E.coli cells proved to be the preferred recombinant host cell to express either
Psp
190 or
Psp
290.
[0059] Accordingly, in a particular aspect of the present invention the
Psp
190 and
Psp
290 proteins are expressed in recombinant
E. coli host cells containing pEGT1 plasmids. Two corresponding recombinant
E. coli HMS174(DE3)/pEGT1 plasmids encoding these proteins were deposited with the:
Belgian Coordinated Collections of Microorganisms (BCCM) under the terms of the Budapest
Treaty and represented by:
BCCM/LMBP
Department of Molecular Biology
Ghent University
Fiers-Schell-Van Mantagu Building
Technologiepark 927
B-9052 Zwijnaarde
The International Depository Authority :
Belgian Coordinated Collections of Microorganisms (BCCM™) Laboratorium voor Moleculaire Biologie-Plasmidencollectie (LMBP) Universiteit Gent
Technologiepark 927
B-9052 Gent-Zwijnaarde, Belgium
Both plasmid deposits were all made on October 19, 2007.
[0060]
- Psp190
- E. coli HMS174(DE3)/pEGT1/AL-ORF1-90kDa
- BCCM accession No. LMBP 5690
- Psp290
- E. coli HMS174(DE3)/pEGT1/AL-ORF2-90kDa
- BCCM accession No. LMBP 5691
[0061] The present invention also provides vaccines against SRS that further comprise and/or
encode one or more additional
P. salmonis antigens. Such additional antigens include those described by US Published Patent
Application No.
US20070207165 (A1) and those described by
WO2006037383(A1). These antigens include isolated
P. salmonis Psp45 protein comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 7 (complete
Psp45 protein) or SEQ ID NO: 8 (
Psp45 protein without the signal sequence) and antigenic fragments thereof.
[0062] Additional antigens described by
US20070207165 (A1) and
WO2006037383(A1),
see also Table 14 below, include those comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 9
(which shows homology with a protein family coding for AMP-binding enzymes), SEQ ID
NO: 10 (which shows no homology to any protein family), SEQ ID NO: 11 (which shows
no homology to any protein family), SEQ ID NO: 12 (which shows homology to the DDE
endonuclease family and in particular to the integrase core domain), SEQ ID NO: 13
(which shows homology to transposases), SEQ ID NO: 14 (which shows some homology to
the HlyD family of secretory proteins), and/or SEQ ID NO: 15 (which shows homology
to the intergral membrane AcrB/AcrD/ AcrB protein family). These antigens can be expressed
e.g., by nucleic acids that encode one or more of these amino acid sequences.
[0063] As indicated above,
Psp45 protein can be produced by recombinant
Yersinia ruckeri cells.
[0064] The present invention also provides combination vaccines against SRS and IPN (SRS/IPN
vaccines) that comprise one or more inventive
P.
salmonis 90kDa antigens (
e.g.,
Psp
190 and optionally
Psp
290) optionally in combination with any of the
Psp45 proteins or SRS antigens noted above, in combination with one or more antigens
obtained from an Infectious Pancreatic Necrosis (IPN) virus. These recombinant proteins
(IPN antigens) are preferably expressed by transformed yeast,
Pichia pastoris.
[0065] In one such embodiment, the antigen obtained from the IPN virus is the VP2 var protein
or an antigenic fragment thereof.
[0066] As used herein the following terms shall have the definitions set out below:
As used herein the term "Psp190" is used interchangably with the term "ORF1" and denotes a specific Piscirickettsia salmonis protein that is about 90kDa in molecular weight. In a particular embodiment, Psp1 90 comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, which is encoded by the P. salmonis nucleotide sequence SEQ ID NO: 1 and the nucleotide sequence SEQ ID NO: 5, which
was optimized for E. coli codon usage.
Psp1 90 is encoded by an EGT1 plasmid deposited with the BCCM™/LMBP Collection having ascension number LMP 5690.
As used herein the term "Psp290" is used interchangably with the term "ORF2" and denotes a specific Piscirickettsia salmonis protein that is about 90kDa in molecular weight. Described herein Psp290 comprises the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4, which is encoded by the P. salmonis nucleotide sequence SEQ ID NO: 3 and the nucleotide sequence SEQ ID NO: 6, which
was optimized for E. coli codon usage.
Psp2 90 is encoded by an EGT1 plasmid deposited with the BCCM™/LMBP Collection having ascension number LMP 5691.
[0067] As used herein the term "polypeptide" is used interchangeably with the term "protein"
and is further meant to encompass peptides. Therefore, as used herein, a polypeptide
is a polymer of two or more amino acids joined together by peptide linkages. Preferably,
a polypeptide is a polymer comprising twenty or more amino acid residues joined together
by peptide linkages, whereas a peptide comprises two to twenty amino acid residues
joined together by peptide linkages.
[0068] As used herein a polypeptide "consisting essentially of" or that "consists essentially
of" a specified amino acid sequence is a polypeptide that (i) retains an important
characteristic of the polypeptide comprising that amino acid sequence, e.g., the antigenicity
of at least one epitope of the inventive 90kDa protein(s), and (ii) further comprises
the identical amino acid sequence(s), except it consists of plus or minus 10% (or
a lower percentage), and preferably plus or minus 5% (or a lower percentage) of the
amino acid residues. In a particular embodiment, additional amino acid residues included
as part of the polypeptide are part of a linked Tag, such as a C-terminal His
6 Tag.
[0069] A molecule is "antigenic" when it is capable of specifically interacting with an
antigen recognition molecule of the immune system, such as an immunoglobulin (antibody)
or T cell antigen receptor. An antigenic polypeptide (and/or fragment of the polypeptide)
contains at least 6, and preferably at least 12 or more amino acid residues. An antigenic
portion of a molecule can be that portion that is immunodominant for recognition by
an antibody or a T cell receptor, and/or it can be a portion used to generate an antibody
to the molecule by conjugating an immunogenic portion of the antigen to a carrier
molecule for immunization. A molecule that is antigenic need not be itself immunogenic,
i.e., capable of eliciting an immune response without a carrier.
[0070] As used herein the term "antigenic fragment" of a particular protein is a fragment
of that protein that is antigenic. For example, an antigenic fragment of a
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein can be any antigenic fragment of the
Psp
190 protein or
Psp
290 protein respectively, including large fragments that are missing as little as a
single amino acid from the full-length protein. In a particular embodiment, an antigenic
fragment of the
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein contains between 12 and 800 amino acid residues. In another embodiment,
an antigenic fragment of the
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein contains between 25 and 250 amino acid residues. In yet another embodiment,
an antigenic fragment of a
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein contains 100 amino acid residues or more, but fewer than 600 amino acid
residues. In still another embodiment, an antigenic fragment of a
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein contains 250 amino acid residues or more, but fewer than 600 amino acid
residues. In yet another embodiment, an antigenic fragment of a
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein contains 400 amino acid residues or more, but fewer than 600 amino acid
residues.
[0071] An antigenic fragment of a given
Psp
190 protein or a
Psp
290 protein can be obtained from a recombinant source, from a protein isolated from
natural sources, or through chemical synthesis. Similarly, an antigenic fragment can
be obtained following the proteolytic digestion of such
Psp
190 proteins,
Psp
290 proteins or fragments of either. Alternatively, an antigenic fragment of the present
invention can be generated by recombinant expression, or alternatively, through peptide
synthesis.
[0072] As used herein, a multivalent vaccine is a vaccine that comprises two or more different
antigens. In a particular embodiment of this type, the multivalent vaccine stimulates
the immune system of the recipient against two or more different pathogens. Specific
multivalent vaccines are exemplified below.
[0073] As used herein the term "chimeric protein" is used interchangeably with the terms
"chimeric polypeptide" and "chimeric peptide" and is meant to include fusion proteins,
polypeptides, and peptides. A "chimeric protein" comprising a
Psp
190 and/or
Psp
290 protein of the present invention comprises at least a portion of a particular protein
(
e.g., Psp
190) joined
via a peptide bond to at least a portion of a different protein (
e.g., a non-
Psp
190 protein). A chimeric protein of the present invention also can comprise two or
more different proteins and/or portions thereof, including a chimeric
Psp
190-
Psp
290 protein. Chimeric proteins of the present invention also can have additional structural,
regulatory, and/or catalytic properties. As used herein a chimeric protein can contain
multiple additions to at least a portion of a given protein,
e.g., a chimeric protein can comprise both a His
6Tag and an alternative signal sequence. In a particular embodiment, a non-
Psp
190 (or non-
Psp
290) portion of the chimeric protein functions as a means of detecting and/or isolating
the chimeric protein or fragment thereof after a recombinant nucleotide encoding the
given protein or antigenic fragment thereof is expressed. Non-
Psp
190 (or non-
Psp
290) protein amino acid sequences are generally, but not always, either amino- or carboxy-terminal
to the protein sequence.
[0074] As used herein one amino acid sequence is 100% "identical" to a second amino acid
sequence when the amino acid residues of both sequences are identical. Accordingly,
an amino acid sequence is 50% "identical" to a second amino acid sequence when 50%
of the amino acid residues of the two amino acid sequences are identical. The sequence
comparison is performed over a contiguous block of amino acid residues comprised by
a given protein,
e.g., a protein, or a portion of the polypeptide being compared. In a particular embodiment,
selected deletions or insertions that could otherwise alter the correspondence between
the two amino acid sequences are taken into account.
[0075] As used herein, DNA and protein sequence percent identity can be determined using
C, MacVector (MacVector, Inc. Cary, NC 27519), Vector NTI (Informax, Inc. MD), Oxford
Molecular Group PLC (1996) and the Clustal W algorithm with the alignment default
parameters, and default parameters for identity. These commercially available programs
can also be used to determine sequence similarity using the same or analogous default
parameters. Alternatively, an Advanced Blast search under the default filter conditions
can be used,
e.g., using the GCG (Genetics Computer Group, Program Manual for the GCG Package, Version
7, Madison, Wisconsin) pileup program using the default parameters.
[0076] As used herein a "nucleic acid" refers to the phosphate ester polymeric form of ribonucleosides
(adenosine, guanosine, uridine or cytidine; "RNA molecules") or deoxyribonucleosides
(deoxyadenosine, deoxyguanosine, deoxythymidine, or deoxycytidine; "DNA molecules"),
or any phosphoester analogs thereof, such as phosphorothioates and thioesters, in
either single stranded form, or a double-stranded helix. Double stranded DNA-DNA,
DNA-RNA and RNA-RNA helices are possible. When referring to a nucleic acid that is
double stranded both the "sense" strand and the complementary "antisense" strand are
intended to be included. Thus a nucleic acid that is hybridizable to SEQ ID NOs: 1
or 3, for example, can be either hybridizable to the "sense" strand of the respective
sequence, or to the "antisense" strand which can be readily determined from the respective
sense strands listed in the Sequence Listing provided herein. The individual components
of a nucleic acid are referred to as nucleotides.
[0077] A DNA "coding sequence" is a double-stranded DNA sequence that is transcribed and
translated into a polypeptide in a cell
in vitro or
in vivo when placed under the control of appropriate regulatory sequences. The boundaries
of the coding sequence are determined by a start codon at the 5' (amino) terminus
and a translation stop codon at the 3' (carboxyl) terminus. A nucleotide coding sequence
can include, but is not limited to, prokaryotic sequences, cDNA from eukaryotic mRNA,
genomic DNA sequences from eukaryotic (
e.g., mammalian) DNA, and even synthetic DNA sequences. If the coding sequence is intended
for expression in a eukaryotic cell, a polyadenylation signal and transcription termination
sequence will usually be located 3' to the coding sequence.
[0078] Transcriptional and translational control sequences are DNA regulatory sequences,
such as promoters, enhancers, terminators, and the like, that provide for the expression
of a coding sequence in a host cell. In eukaryotic cells, polyadenylation signals
are control sequences.
[0079] A "promoter sequence" is a DNA regulatory region capable of binding RNA polymerase
in a cell and initiating transcription of a downstream (3' direction) coding sequence.
For purposes of defining the present invention, the promoter sequence is bounded at
its 3' terminus by the transcription initiation site and extends upstream (5' direction)
to include the minimum number of bases or elements necessary to initiate transcription
at levels detectable above background. Within the promoter sequence will be found
a transcription initiation site (conveniently defined for example, by mapping with
nuclease S1), as well as protein binding domains (consensus sequences) responsible
for the binding of RNA polymerase.
[0080] A coding sequence is "under the control" of transcriptional and translational control
sequences in a cell when RNA polymerase transcribes the coding sequence into mRNA,
which can then be trans-RNA spliced, if, when, and where appropriate, and translated
into the protein encoded by the coding sequence.
[0081] A nucleotide sequence is "operatively linked" to an expression control sequence when
the expression control sequence controls or regulates the transcription and translation
of that nucleotide sequence. The term operatively linked includes having an appropriate
start signal.
[0082] A "heterologous nucleotide sequence" as used herein is a nucleotide sequence that
is added by recombinant methods to a nucleotide sequence encoding a polypeptide of
the present invention or encoding a fragment thereof (
i.e., an antigenic fragment), to form a nucleic acid that is not naturally formed in nature.
Such nucleic acids can
e.g., encode chimeric proteins. In addition, as used herein, a heterologous nucleotide
sequence need not be a single contiguous nucleotide sequence, but can include multiple
non-contiguous nucleotide sequences that have been combined with a nucleotide sequence
encoding a polypeptide of the present invention, or a portion thereof. A heterologous
nucleotide sequence can comprise non-coding sequences including restriction sites,
regulatory sites, promoters and the like. In still another embodiment the heterologous
nucleotide can function as a means of detecting a nucleic acid of the present invention.
[0083] The present invention provides heterologous nucleotide sequences that when combined
with nucleotide sequences encoding a polypeptide of the invention or a fragment thereof,
are necessary and sufficient to encode all of the chimeric proteins of the present
invention. In a particular embodiment, the polypeptide comprises the amino acid sequence
of SEQ ID NO: 2.
[0084] As used herein, a bacterium is said to be "recombinant" when the nucleotide sequence
of the DNA that it naturally contains has been purposely altered by at least one nucleotide
addition, deletion, and/or modification through genetic engineering. A recombinant
bacterin is an inactivated or killed recombinant bacterium.
[0085] The phrase "binding to" or "binds to" in regard to a ligand binding to a polypeptide
(
e.g., antigen to an antibody) is used herein to include any or all such specific interactions
that lead to a protein-ligand binding complex. This can include processes such as
covalent, ionic (electrostatic and/or charged), hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding,
but does not include non-specific associations such as solvent preferences.
[0086] As used herein a "small organic molecule" is an organic compound [or organic compound
complexed with an inorganic compound (
e.g., metal)] that has a molecular weight of less than 3 kDa.
[0087] As used herein the terms "approximately" and "about" are used to signify that a value
is within twenty percent of the indicated value
i.e., an amino acid sequence containing "approximately" 400 amino acid residues can contain
between 320 and 480 amino acid residues.
[0088] As used herein the unit "° days" denotes the number of days of incubation following
the vaccination of a fish, multiplied by the average temperature in °C for that incubation.
Nucleic Acids Encoding the Polypeptides of the Present Invention
[0089] A nucleic acid, such as a cDNA, that encodes a polypeptide of the present invention,
can be placed into a vector,
e.g., a recombinant bacterial host cell, to express a protein and/or antigen of the present
invention,
e.g., the
Psp
1 90 and
Psp
2 90 proteins. Such recombinant host cells can be inactivated, e.g., disrupted and
converted to bacterins, and used in immunogenic compositions such as vaccines.
[0090] In addition, obtaining and/or constructing a DNA that encodes one of the polypeptides
of the present invention, including those encoding
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90, or antigenic fragments thereof, facilitates the production of economically important
quantities of the protein or antigenic fragments thereof. The large quantities of
the proteins and/or antigenic fragments thereof produced are useful for making certain
vaccines of the present invention.
[0091] Accordingly, the present invention provides specific nucleotide constructs that allow
for the expression and isolation of large quantities of the proteins and/or antigens
of the present invention, such as the
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 proteins. These nucleic acids can further contain heterologous nucleotide sequences.
To express a recombinant protein of the present invention in a host cell, an expression
vector can be constructed comprising the corresponding cDNA. The present invention
therefore, provides expression vectors containing nucleic acids encoding the proteins
of the present invention, including variants thereof.
[0092] Due to the degeneracy of nucleotide coding sequences, other DNA sequences which encode
substantially the same amino acid sequence as a nucleic acid encoding a polypeptide
of the present invention may be used in the practice of the present invention. These
include, but are not limited to, allelic genes, homologous genes from other strains,
and/or those that are altered by the substitution of different codons that encode
the same amino acid residue within the sequence, thus producing a silent change. Host
cells comprising the expression vectors of the present invention are also provided.
One particular host cell is an
E. coli cell.
[0094] In addition, any technique for mutagenesis known in the art can be used to modify
a native
Psp
1 90 or
Psp
2 90 protein of the present invention, including but not limited to,
in vitro site-directed mutagenesis [
Hutchinson et al., J. Biol. Chem., 253:6551 (1978);
Zoller and Smith, DNA, 3:479-488 (1984);
Oliphant et al., Gene, 44:177 (1986);
Hutchinson et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 83:710 (1986);
Wang and Malcolm, BioTechniques 26:680-682 (1999). The use of TAB@ linkers (Pharmacia), etc. and PCR techniques also can be employed
for site directed mutagenesis [
see Higuchi, "Using PCR to Engineer DNA", in PCR Technology: Principles and Applications
for DNA Amplification, H. Erlich, ed., Stockton Press, Chapter 6, pp. 61-70 (1989)].
[0096] The conditions of temperature and ionic strength determine the "stringency" of the
hybridization. For preliminary screening for homologous nucleotides, low stringency
hybridization conditions, corresponding to a T
m of 55°C, can be used,
e.g., 5X saline sodium citrate (SSC), 0.1% sodium dodecyl sufate (SDS), 0.25% milk, and
no formamide; or 30% formamide, 5XSSC, 0.5% SDS. Moderate stringency hybridization
conditions correspond to a higher T
m,
e.g., 40% formamide, with 5X or 6XSSC. High stringency hybridization conditions correspond
to the highest T
m,
e.g., 50% formamide, 5X or 6XSSC. Hybridization requires that the two nucleic acids contain
complementary sequences, although depending on the stringency of the hybridization,
mismatches between bases are possible. The appropriate stringency for hybridizing
nucleic acids depends on the length of the nucleic acids and the degree of complementation,
variables well known in the art. The greater the degree of similarity or homology
between two nucleotide sequences, the greater the value of T
m for hybrids of nucleotides having those sequences. The relative stability (corresponding
to higher T
m) of nucleotide hybridizations decreases in the following order: RNA:RNA, DNA:RNA,
DNA:DNA. For hybrids of greater than 100 nucleotides in length, equations for calculating
T
m have been derived [see
Sambrook and Russell, Molecular Cloning, A laboratory Manual, 3rd edition, Cold Spring
Harbor Laboratory Press, Cold Spring Harbor L.I. (2000)]. For hybridization with shorter nucleic acids,
i.e., oligonucleotides, the position of mismatches becomes more important, and the length
of the oligonucleotide determines its specificity.
[0097] Depending upon circumstances a suitable minimal length for a hybridizable nucleic
acid can be at least about 12 nucleotides; or at least about 18 nucleotides; or the
length can be at least about 24 nucleotides; or at least about 36 nucleotides. Alternatively,
the minimum length can be at least about 48 or at least about 72 nucleotides, or longer,
as indicated above. In a specific embodiment, the term "standard hybridization conditions"
refers to a T
m of 55°C, and utilizes conditions as set forth above. Under more stringent conditions,
the T
m is 60°C, and under even more stringent conditions, the T
m is 65°C for both hybridization and wash conditions, respectively.
Polypeptides of the Present Invention
[0098] The present invention provides isolated and/or recombinant
Piscirickettsia salmonis polypeptides, including all of the antigens of the present invention,
e.g., the
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 proteins (plus or minus an amino-terminal signal peptide),
P. salmonis strain variants thereof, antigenic fragments thereof, and chimeric proteins thereof.
In addition, polypeptides containing altered sequences in which functionally equivalent
amino acid residues are substituted for those within the wild type amino acid sequence
resulting in a conservative amino acid substitution, are also provided by the present
invention.
[0099] For example, one or more of these amino acid residues within the sequence can be
substituted by another amino acid of a similar polarity, which acts as a functional
equivalent, resulting in a silent alteration. Substitutes for an amino acid within
the sequence may be selected from other members of the class to which the amino acid
belongs.
[0100] For example, the nonpolar amino acids include alanine, leucine, isoleucine, valine,
proline, phenylalanine, tryptophan and methionine. The polar neutral amino acids include
glycine, serine, threonine, cysteine, tyrosine, asparagine, and glutamine. The positively
charged (basic) amino acids include arginine and lysine. The negatively charged (acidic)
amino acids include aspartic acid and glutamic acid.
[0101] Particularly preferred conserved amino acid exchanges are:
- (a) Lys for Arg or vice versa such that a positive charge may be maintained;
- (b) Glu for Asp or vice versa such that a negative charge may be maintained;
- (c) Ser for Thr or vice versa such that a free -OH can be maintained;
- (d) Gln for Asn or vice versa such that a free NH2 can be maintained; and
- (e) Ile for Leu or for Val or vice versa as being roughly equivalent hydrophobic amino acids.
[0102] All of the polypeptides of the present invention, including antigenic fragments,
also can be part of a chimeric protein. In a specific embodiment, a chimeric polypeptide
is expressed in a prokaryotic cell. Such a chimeric protein can be a fusion protein
used to isolate a polypeptide of the present invention, through the use of an affinity
column that is specific for a protein fused to the
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 proteins, for example. Examples of such fusion proteins include: a glutathione-S-transferase
(GST) fusion protein, a maltose-binding protein (MBP) fusion protein, a FLAG-tagged
fusion protein, or a poly-histidine-tagged fusion protein. Specific linker sequences
such as a Ser-Gly linker can also be part of such a fusion protein.
[0103] Indeed, the expression of one or more of the inventive proteins, as a fusion protein,
can facilitate stable expression, and/or allow for purification based on the properties
of the fusion partner. Thus the purification of the recombinant polypeptides of the
present invention can be simplified through the use of fusion proteins having affinity
Tags. For example, GST binds glutathione conjugated to a solid support matrix, MBP
binds to a maltose matrix, and poly-histidine chelates to a Ni-chelation support matrix
[see
Hochuli et al., Biotechnology 6:1321-1325 (1998)].
[0104] The fusion protein can be eluted from the specific matrix with appropriate buffers,
or by treating with a protease that is specific for a cleavage site that has been
genetically engineered in between a
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein, for example, and its fusion partner. Alternatively, a
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein can be combined with a marker protein such as green fluorescent protein
[
Waldo et al., Nature Biotech. 17:691-695 (1999);
U.S. Patent No. 5,625,048 and
WO 97/26333].
[0105] Alternatively or in addition, other column chromatography steps (e.g., gel filtration,
ion exchange, affinity chromatography etc.) can be used to purify the recombinant
polypeptides of the present invention (see below). In many cases, such column chromatography
steps employ high performance liquid chromatography or analogous methods in place
of the more classical gravity-based procedures.
[0106] In addition, the polypeptides of the present invention, including the
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 proteins, and antigenic fragments thereof, can be chemically synthesized [
see e.g., Synthetic Peptides: A User's Guide, W.H.Freeman & Co., New York, N.Y., pp. 382, Grant,
ed. (1992)].
General Polypeptide Purification Procedures:
[0107] Generally, initial steps for purifying a polypeptide of the present invention can
include salting in or salting out, in ammonium sulfate fractionations; solvent exclusion
fractionations, e.g., an ethanol precipitation; detergent extractions to free membrane
bound polypeptides, using such detergents as TRITON X- 100, TWEEN-20 etc.; or high
salt extractions. Solubilization of membrane proteins may also be achieved using aprotic
solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide and hexamethylphosphoramide. In addition, high
speed ultracentrifugation may be used either alone or in conjunction with other extraction
techniques.
[0108] Generally good secondary isolation or purification steps include solid phase absorption
using calcium phosphate gel, hydroxyapatite, or solid phase binding. Solid phase binding
may be performed through ionic bonding, with either an anion exchanger, such as diethylaminoethyl
(DEAE), or diethyl [2-hydroxypropyll aminoethyl (QAE) SEPHADEX or cellulose; or with
a cation exchanger such as carboxymethyl (CM) or sulfopropyl (SP) SEPHADEX or cellulose.
Alternative means of solid phase binding includes the exploitation of hydrophobic
interactions e.g., the use of a solid support such as phenylSepharose and a high salt
buffer; affinity-binding immuno-binding, using
e.g., a inventive protein bound to a suitable anti-
Psp
1 90 and/or anti-
Psp
2 90 selective antibody, respectfully, bound to an activated support. Other solid phase
supports include those that contain specific dyes or lectins etc.
[0109] A further solid phase support technique that is often used at the end of the purification
procedure relies on size exclusion, such as SEPHADEX and SEPHAROSE gels. Alternatively,
a pressurized or centrifugal membrane technique, using size exclusion membrane filters
may be employed. Oftentimes, these two methodologies are used in tandem.
[0110] Solid phase support separations are generally performed batch-wise with low-speed
centrifugation, or by column chromatography. High performance liquid chromatography
(HPLC), including such related techniques as FPLC, is presently the most common means
of performing liquid chromatography. Size exclusion techniques may also be accomplished
with the aid of low speed centrifugation. In addition size permeation techniques such
as gel electrophoretic techniques may be employed. These techniques are generally
performed in tubes, slabs or by capillary electrophoresis.
[0111] Almost all steps involving polypeptide purification employ a buffered solution. Unless
otherwise specified, generally 25-100 mM concentrations of buffer salts are used.
Low concentration buffers generally imply 5-25 mM concentrations. High concentration
buffers generally imply concentrations of the buffering agent of between 0.1 - 2.0
M concentrations. Typical buffers can be purchased from most biochemical catalogues
and include the classical buffers such as Tris, pyrophosphate, monophosphate and diphosphate
and the Good buffers such as Mes, Hepes, Mops, Tricine and Ches [
Good et al., Biochemistry, 5:467 (1966);
Good and Izawa, Meth. Enzymo/., 24B:53 (1972); and
Fergunson and Good, Anal. Biochem., 104:300 (1980].
[0112] Materials to perform all of these techniques are available from a variety of commercial
sources such as Sigma Chemical Company in St. Louis, Missouri.
Antibodies to the Polypeptides of the Present Invention
[0113] The polypeptides of the present invention, and antigenic fragments thereof, as produced
by a recombinant source, or through chemical synthesis, or as isolated from natural
sources; and variants, derivatives or analogs thereof, including fusion proteins,
may be used as an immunogen to generate antibodies. Such antibodies include but are
not limited to polyclonal, monoclonal, chimeric including single chain, Fab fragments,
and a Fab expression library. Such antibodies can be used in diagnostic kits or as
components in vaccines.
[0114] Specific anti-
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein antibodies of the invention, for example, may be cross-reactive, that
is, they may recognize one specific 90kDa protein,
e.g.,
Psp
1 90, or a closely related protein obtained from a different source (
e.g., a
Piscirickettsia-like bacterium). Polyclonal antibodies have greater likelihood of cross-reactivity.
Alternatively, an antibody of the invention may be specific for a single form of an
inventive protein, for example, such as a specific fragment of
Psp
1 90 that has the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, or a closely related variant
thereof.
[0115] In a particular aspect of the present invention compositions and uses of antibodies
that are immunoreactive with a
Psp
1 90 and optionally
Psp
2 90 protein are provided. Such antibodies "bind specifically" to the particular
Psp
1 90 and optionally
Psp
2 90 protein respectively, meaning that they bind
via antigen-binding sites of the antibody as compared to non-specific binding interactions.
[0116] The terms "antibody" and "antibodies" are used herein in their broadest sense, and
include, without limitation, intact monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies as well as
fragments such as Fv, Fab, and F(ab') fragments, single-chain antibodies such as scFv,
and various chain combinations. The antibodies may be prepared using a variety of
well-known methods including, without limitation, immunization of animals having native
or transgenic immune repertoires, phage display, hybridoma and recombinant cell culture.
[0117] Both polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies may be prepared by conventional techniques.
[
See, for example, Monoclonal Antibodies, Hybridomas: A New Dimension in Biological Analyses, Kennet
et al. (eds.), Plenum Press, New York 37 (1980); and
Antibodies: A Laboratory Manual, Harlow and Land (eds.), Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Press, Cold Spring Harbor, NY, (1988)].
[0118] Various procedures known in the art may be used for the production of polyclonal
antibodies to a particular
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein, variants or derivatives or analogs thereof. For the production of an
antibody, various host animals can be immunized by injection with the
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein, variant or a derivative (
e.g., or fusion protein) thereof or fragment thereof, including but not limited to rabbits,
mice, rats, sheep, goats, etc. In one embodiment, the inventive protein can be conjugated
to an immunogenic carrier,
e.g., bovine serum albumin (BSA) or keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH). Various adjuvants
may be used to increase the immunological response, depending on the host species,
including but not limited to Freund's (complete and incomplete), mineral gels such
as aluminum hydroxide, surface active substances such as lysolecithin, pluronic polyols,
polyanions, peptides, oil emulsions, keyhole limpet hemocyanins, and dinitrophenol.
[0119] For preparation of monoclonal antibodies directed toward a given inventive protein,
variant, or analog, or derivative thereof, any technique that provides for the production
of antibody molecules by continuous cell lines in culture may be used. These include
but are not limited to the hybridoma technique originally developed by
Kohler and Milstein [Nature, 256:495-497 (1975)], as well as the trioma technique, and the human B cell hybridoma technique [
Kozbor et al., Immunology Today, 4:72 (1983);
Cote et al., Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. U.S.A., 80:2026-2030 (1983)].
[0120] The monoclonal antibodies of the present invention include chimeric antibodies versions
of antibodies originally produced in mice or other non-human animals. Techniques developed
for the production of "chimeric antibodies" by splicing the genes from a mouse antibody
molecule specific for a given inventive protein, for example, together with genes
from a fish antibody of appropriate biological activity (
e.g., a salmon) can be used. Such chimeric antibodies are within the scope of this invention
[
see in general, Morrison et al., J Bacteriol, 159:870 (1984);
Neuberger et al., Nature, 312:604-608 (1984);
Takeda et al., Nature, 314:452-454 (1985)].
[0121] Hybridoma cell lines that produce monoclonal antibodies specific for the polypeptides
of the present invention are also provided by the present invention. Such hybridomas
may be produced and identified by conventional techniques.
[0122] One method for producing such a hybridoma cell line comprises immunizing an animal
with a polypeptide, harvesting spleen cells from the immunized animal, fusing the
spleen cells to a myeloma cell line, thereby generating hybridoma cells, and identifying
a hybridoma cell line that produces a monoclonal antibody that binds the polypeptide.
The monoclonal antibodies produced by hybridomas may be recovered by conventional
techniques.
[0123] According to the invention, techniques described for the production of single chain
antibodies [
U.S. Patent Nos. 5,476,786,
5,132,405, and
4,946,778, can be adapted to produce
p. salmonis protein-specific single chain antibodies,
e.g., Psp
290 protein-specific single chain antibodies. An additional embodiment of the invention
utilizes the techniques described for the construction of Fab expression libraries
[
Huse et al., Science, 246:1275-1281 (1989)] to allow rapid and easy identification of monoclonal Fab fragments with the desired
specificity for
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein, variant, derivative, and/or analog.
[0124] Antibody fragments which contain the idiotype of the antibody molecule can be generated
by known techniques. For example, such fragments include but are not limited to: the
F(ab')2 fragment which can be produced by pepsin digestion of the antibody molecule;
the Fab' fragments which can be generated by reducing the disulfide bridges of the
F(ab')2 fragment, and the Fab fragments which can be generated by treating the antibody
molecule with papain and a reducing agent.
[0125] In the production of antibodies, screening for the desired antibody can be accomplished
by such techniques as radioimmunoassay, enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay (ELISA),
"sandwich" immunoassays, immunoradiometric assays, gel diffusion precipitin reactions,
immunodiffusion assays,
in situ immunoassays (using colloidal gold, enzyme or radioisotope labels, for example),
Western blots, precipitation reactions, agglutination assays (
e.g., gel agglutination assays, hemagglutination assays), complement fixation assays,
immunofluorescence assays, protein A assays, and immunoelectrophoresis assays.
[0126] In one embodiment, antibody binding is detected by detecting a label,
e.g., a fluorescent label such as fluorescene isothiocyanate (FITC), on the primary antibody.
In another embodiment, the primary antibody is detected by detecting binding of a
secondary antibody or reagent to the primary antibody. In a further embodiment, the
secondary antibody is labeled. Many means are known in the art for detecting binding
in an immunoassay and are within the scope of the present invention. For example,
to select antibodies which recognize a specific epitope of a particular inventive
protein, one may assay the hybridomas generated for a product which binds to a protein
fragment containing such an epitope and choose those which do not cross-react with
a modified inventive protein that does not contain that epitope. One can select an
antibody specific to
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 from a particular source based on the positive specific binding with that specific
protein.
SRS Vaccines
[0127] The present invention provides SRS vaccines. One particular embodiment is a non-mineral
oil injection prime vaccine comprising one or more antigens from
Piscirickettsia salmonis, as disclosed below. In one embodiment of this type, inactivated recombinant bacteria
(bacterins) comprise one or more of the
Piscirickettsia salmonis antigens of the present invention. The present invention also provides SRS vaccines
that are designed to protect against one or more other fish pathogens. For example,
furunculosis is an infectious ulcerative disease of salmon and trout caused by the
bacterium
Aeromonas salmonicida. In a particular embodiment, the vaccine will comprise in addition to the
Piscirickettsia salmonis component(s), two Infectious
pancreatic necrosis (IPN) antigens as discussed herein,
A. salmonicida as discussed below,
Vibrio ordalii, Infectious Salmon Anemia, and/or
Salmon Pancreatic Disease.
[0128] Other fish pathogens include, but are not limited to:
| PATHOGEN (antigen) |
RELATED DISEASE |
| • IPN virus |
Infectious pancreatic necrosis |
| • Vibrio anguillarum or Vibrio ordalii |
Vibrosis |
| • Vibrio salmonicida |
Cold water Vibriosis (Hitra disease) |
| • Moritella viscosus |
Winter sores disease |
| • Photobacterium damsela (subspecies Piscicida) |
Pasteurellosis |
| • Lactococccus garviae Streptococcus iniae |
Streptococcosis |
| • Moritella viscoses |
Winter Sores |
| • Noccardia kampachi |
|
| • Renibacterium salmoninarum |
|
| • ISA Virus |
Infectious Salmon Anemia |
| • IHN Virus |
Infectious Heamorhagic Necrosis |
| • SPD Virus |
Salmon pancreatic disease |
| • SD Virus |
Sleeping disease |
[0129] The vaccines for these various diseases can be prepared from whole cells, bacterins,
killed and/or attenuated virus, protein extracts, recombinant DNA vaccine vectors,
isolated antigens, recombinant antigens and mixtures thereof. Under particular circumstances,
as for
Photobacterium damsela and
Aeromonas satmonicicla, the vaccines are preferably prepared from two separate cultures grown under iron-depleted
conditions and iron-supplemented conditions, respectively.
[0130] In a particular embodiment, a vaccine comprises the
Psp
1 90 and optionally
Psp
2 90 protein(s) from
Piscirickettsia salmonis. In another embodiment, a vaccine comprises the
Psp
1 90 and optionally
Psp
2 90 protein(s) in combination with one or more of the above-noted other antigens from
Piscirickettsia salmonis (
e.g.,the
Ps45 protein). In another embodiment, a vaccine comprises the
Psp
1 90 and optionally
Psp
2 90 protein(s), optionally in combination with
IPN proteins, and optionally further in combination with one or more other antigens from
Piscirickettsia salmonis. In still another embodiment, the vaccine comprises the
Psp
1 90 and optionally
Psp
2 90 protein(s) and/or one or more otherantigens from
Pisciricketisia salmonis, one or more IPN proteins,
and one or more antigens to control
Aeromonas salmonicida. In a particular embodiment of this type,
Aeromonas salmonicida antigens are two types of whole bacteria grown on bacterial growth media and killed
by the addition of formalin.
[0131] For an SRS vaccine according to the invention,
Escherichia coli was selected as the best candidate for hosting and expressing the
Psp
1 90 and/or
Psp
2 90 protein(s) of the present invention.
[0132] Two IPN viral antigens are exemplified below (
see also WO 02/38770, the contents of which are hereby incorporated in its entireties). One of which is
derived from Vp2, which is the major outer capsid protein and the other from Vp3,
which is an internal protein of the IPN virus. The molecular weight of the Vp2 protein
is 52 kDa, whereas that of the Vp3 protein is 30 kDa. The IPN proteins of the vaccines
of the present invention are preferably purified recombinant proteins. In the Example
6 below, the IPN proteins are expressed and excreted by transformed yeast (
Pichia pastoris) and then optionally purified from these yeast cells.
[0133] Antigens for a vaccine that also protects against furunculosis can be obtained from
whole killed bacteria
Aeromonas salmonicida (
e.g., formalin-killed). Early
A. salmonicida vaccines contain whole
A. salmonicida bacteria grown in normal growth medium and then inactivated by the addition of formalin.
These bacterins contain a mixture of antigens including the surface A-layer, inactivated
proteases and lipopoly-saccharide. On the other hand when
A salmonicida are grown in normal medium in the total absence of iron, a group of new antigens
are expressed. These new antigens are termed iron-regulated outer membrane proteins
(IROMP). IROMPS are highly immunogenic and they provide enhanced protection relative
to vaccines containing inactivated
A. salmonicida grown in normal medium. Four IROMP proteins having molecular weights of 82 kDa, 77
kDa, 72 kDa and 70 kDa respectively have been identified.
[0134] The primary and secondary antibody responses to IROMP antigens in Atlantic salmon
(
Salmo salar) immunized with A+ (iron
plus) and A- (iron
minus)
Aeromonas salmonicida bacterins have been reported [
O'Dowd et al., Fish & Shellfish Immunology 9:125-138 (1999)]. Thus particular vaccines of the present invention contain one strain of
A. salmonicida (MT004) grown under conditions of iron-limitation and one strain of
A. salmonicida (MT423) grown under condition of iron-supplementation.
[0135] The
Vibrio anguillarum (serotype 01) and
V. anguillarum (serotype 02) are different serotypes that are not cross-protective and therefore,
for broad spectrum protection both antigens are can be included in the vaccine. Alternatively,
or in combination,
Vibrio ordalii can be employed.
Administration
[0136] The vaccines of the present invention may be administered to fish by any of a number
of means including by injection (
e.g., intramucuscularly, or intraperitoneally), immersion, and/or through a delivery
system for oral vaccination. Vaccinating fish by injection can be performed either
with an adjuvant to increase the activity of the antigens, or without an adjuvant.
Adjuvants include aqueous adjuvants, such as Alhydrogel or aluminum hydroxide, and
oil adjuvants.
[0137] Mineral oil adjuvants are commonly employed in fish vaccines and are included in
the present invention. One such adjuvant is mannide oleate in a mineral oil solution.
In a particular embodiment of this type, the vaccine comprises 70% mannide oleate
in a mineral oil solution. Another mineral oil adjuvant of the present invention consists
of white mineral oil, Span 80 [sorbitan monooleate], and Tween 80 [polyoxyethylene
sorbitan monooleate]. In a particular embodiment, a vaccine comprises 80% of an adjuvant
having the following formulation: 944ml white mineral oil: 50.3ml Span 80: 5.7ml Tween
80.
[0138] Since mineral oil adjuvants generally cause damage to the fish at the site of injection
(lesions, which have to be removed before sale) and they depress growth rates for
a period of time, the present invention also provides non-mineral oil adjuvants. Synthetic
non-mineral oil adjuvants include those commercially available from Seppic SA. Montanide,
e.g., Montanide ISA563, Montanide ISA 575, Montanide ISA 711, and Montanide ISA 760. Montanide
ISA 711 is essentially mannide oleate in an oil solution. Particular embodiments of
a vaccine of the present invention comprise 50% of either Montanide ISA563, Montanide
ISA 575, Montanide ISA 760 or 70% Montanide ISA 711.
[0139] Alternatively, vaccines can be applied by a long-term immersion bath. In one such
embodiment, vaccination
via an immersion bath is preceded by hyperosmotic treatment [see
Huising et al., Vaccine 21:4178-4193 (2003)]. In another embodiment, a vaccine is administered by spraying the fish.
[0140] The present invention also includes orally-delivered vaccines. Generally, oral vaccines
are prepared by either top-dressing the food with an antigen (
e.g., by spray drying) or by incorporating the antigen in the food [
see, e.g., Vinitnantharat et al., Adv. Vet. Med. 41:539-550 (1999)]. Other techniques include water-in-oil methods, bioencapsulation, microencapsulation
incorporation into liposomes, incorporation in hollow feed prills, and incorporation
into microparticle carriers,
e.g., poly-lactide co-glycolide carrier particles [see,
e.g., Singh et al., Expert Opin. Biol. Ther. 4(4):483-491 (2004)]. Yet another method entails expressing the antigen in algae.
[0141] Booster vaccines are also part of the present invention. In a particular embodiment,
an oily emulsion oral booster vaccine comprising one or more antigens from
Piscirickettsia salmonis is used after the primary vaccination. Preferably the oily emulsion is made up of
water:oil in the range of 6:4 to 4:6. The level of free fatty acids should not be
greater than 5% by weight of the oil and preferably no greater than 3%. Particular
oils include whole fish body oil and neutral marine oil. The emulsifier is preferably
food grade. Lecithin can be used as such an emulsifier,
e.g., soya lecithin.
[0142] The emulsifier generally comprises from approximately 0.1% to approximately 5% by
weight of the total emulsion. In a particular embodiment of this type, the oily phase
of the emulsion is 47% v/v refined fish body oil
plus 3% v/v lecithin (Bolec MT) which are mixed, sterilized with
gamma irradiation and then blended, using an homogenizer. The aqueous antigen phase can
be diluted with phosphate buffered saline [
see,
GB 2 255 909,
PCT/GB9101828,
WO/92/06599].
[0143] Injection vaccination is usually conducted on a commercial scale using a fixed dose
automatic repeating syringe or an automatic injection vaccination machine. These methods
are designed to deliver a fixed dose of usually 0.1 or 0.2 ml per fish. The vaccine
is injected through the body wall into the intraperitoneal cavity. It is also possible
to immunize fish by injecting the vaccine into the dorsal sinus. Generally, fish are
vaccinated by injection following anesthetization.
[0144] Immersion vaccination can be performed as follows: Dilute 1 liter of vaccine with
9 liters of clean hatchery water. Then Drain and weigh a netful of fish and dip fish
in the diluted vaccine for 30 to 60 seconds ensuring that fish are totally immersed
in the vaccine. After 30 to 60 seconds lift net, drain and return fish to holding
tank. Repeat until 100kg of fish have been dipped into 10 liters of diluted vaccine.
[0145] Oral vaccination can be performed as follows: A container of vaccine is brought to
room temperature (20°C) and then shaken prior to use. The vaccine is mixed with the
fish feed so that the vaccine is coated onto the surface of the fish feed and adsorbed.
The total vaccine dose should be fed over a 10 day period at 1/10 dose per fish per
day.
VACCINATION RECIPIENTS
[0146] Salmonid rickettsial septicemia (SRS) was first observed in salmonids, which are
the fish in the Salmonidae family, of the order Salmoniformes and of the class Osteichthyes.
Salmonids are elongate bony fish with the last three vertebrae upturned, having a
small adipose fin without fin rays between the dorsal fin and the tail. Many species
of salmonids live in the sea, but enter fresh water to spawn. The Salmonidae family
includes salmon, trout, char, and whitefish (see Table 1, below, which provides a
non-exhaustive list of fish in the Salmonidae family).
TABLE 1
| Salmonidae Family |
| Coregonus clupeaformis |
Lake whitefish |
| Coregonus hoyi |
Bloater |
| Oncorhynchus keta |
Chum salmon |
| Oncorhynchus gorbuscha |
Pink salmon |
| Oncorhynchus kisutch |
Coho salmon (silver salmon) |
| Oncorhynchus masou |
cherry salmon (masou salmon) |
| Oncorhynchus nerka |
Sockeye salmon |
| Oncorhynchus tshawytscha |
King salmon (chinook salmon) |
| Prosopium cylindraceum |
Round whitefish |
| Oncorhynchus clarki |
Cutthroat trout |
| Oncorhynchus mykiss |
Rainbow trout |
| Salmo salar |
Atlantic salmon |
| Salmo trutta |
Brown trout |
| Salmo trutta X S. fontinalis |
Tiger hybrid-trout |
| Salvelinus alpinus |
Arctic charr |
| Salvelinus confluentus |
Bull trout |
| Salvelinus fontinalis |
Brook trout |
| Salvelinus leucomaenis |
Japanese charr (white spotted charr) |
| Salvelinus malma |
Dolly varden (Miyabe charr) |
| Salvelinus namaycush |
Lake trout |
| Thymallus thymallus |
Grayling |
[0147] Reports of (SRS) and closely related Rickettsial syndrome afflicting fish as disparate
as tilapia, white sea bass, rainbow trout, steelhead trout, grouper, Chilean sea bass,
tiger puffers, red sea bream, blue-eyed plecostomus, striped bass, fluke, Atlantic
cod, butter fish, ocean pout, spotted hake, summer and winter flounder, weakfish,
yellowtail flounder, Windowpane flounder
(Scophthalmus aquosus) cultured amberjack, three lined grunt, and blue eyed plecostomus indicates that the
vaccines of the present invention may be used to vaccinate essentially any fish. Preferably
the fish are in the
Teleosti grouping of fish,
i.e., teleosts. Both the Salmoniformes order (which includes the Salmonidae family) and
the Perciformes order (which includes the
Centrarchidae family) are contained within the
Teleosti grouping.
[0148] Aside from the
Salmonidae family and those included above, examples of potential vaccination recipients include
the
Serranidae family, the
Sparidae family, the
Cichlidae family, the
Centrarchidae family, the three-Line Grunt (
Parapristipoma trilineatum), and the Blue-Eyed Plecostomus (
Plecostomus spp) of Tables 2 and 3, below.
TABLE 2
| Some Members of the Serranidae Family |
| TAXON NAME |
COMMON NAME |
| Centropristis ocyurus |
Bank sea bass |
| Centropristis philadelphicus |
Rock sea bass |
| Centropristis striata |
Black sea bass |
| Diplectrum bivittatum |
Dwarf sandperch |
| Diplectrum formosum |
Sand perch |
| Epinephelus flavolimbatus |
Yellowedge grouper |
| Epinephelus morio |
Red grouper |
| Serranus phoebe |
Tattler |
| Serranus tortugarum |
Chalk bass |
| |
|
| Some Members of the Sparidae family |
| TAXON NAME |
COMMON NAME |
| Archosargus probatocephalus |
Sheepshead |
| Archosargus rhomboidalis |
Sea bream |
| Calamus penna |
Sheepshead porgy |
| Lagodon rhomboides |
Pinfish |
| Pagrus Major |
Red Sea bream |
| Sparus aurata |
Gilthead Sea bream |
| Stenotomus chrysops |
Scup |
| Some Members of the Cichlidae family |
| TAXON NAME |
COMMON NAME |
| Aequidens latifrons |
Blue acara |
| Cichlisoma nigrofasciatum |
Congo cichlid |
| Crenichichla sp. |
Pike cichlid |
| Pterophyllum scalare |
Angel fish |
| Tilapia mossambica |
Mozambique mouth breeder |
| Oreochromis spp |
Tilapia |
| Sarotherodon aurea |
Golden Tilapia |
TABLE 3
| Some Members of the Centrarchidae family |
| TAXON NAME |
COMMON NAME |
| Ambloplites rupestris |
Rock bass |
| Centrarchus macropterus |
Flier |
| Elassoma evergladei |
Everglades pigmy sunfish |
| Elassoma okefenokee |
Okefenokee pigmy sunfish |
| Elassoma zonatum |
Banded pigmy sunfish |
| Enneacanthus gloriosus |
Bluespotted sunfish |
| Enneacanthus obesus |
Banded sunfish |
| Lepomis auritus |
Redbreast sunfish |
| Lepomis cyanellus |
Green sunfish |
| Lepomis cyanellus X L. gibbosus |
Green x pumpkinseed |
| Lepomis gibbosus |
Pumpkinseed |
| Lepomis gulosus |
Warmouth |
| Lepomis humilis |
Orange-spotted sunfish |
| Lepomis macrochirus |
Bluegill |
| Lepomis megalotis |
Longear sunfish |
| Micropterus coosae |
Shoal bass |
| Micropterus dolomieui |
Smallmouth bass |
| Micropterus punctulatus |
Spotted bass |
| Micropterus salmoides |
Largemouth bass |
| Pomoxis annularis |
White crappie |
| Pomoxis nigromaculatus |
Black crappie |
[0149] The present invention may be better understood by reference to the following non-limiting
Examples, which are provided as exemplary of the invention. The following examples
are presented in order to more fully illustrate the preferred embodiments of the invention.
They should in no way be construed, however, as limiting the broad scope of the invention.
EXAMPLES
EXAMPLE 1
IDENTIFICATION Of TWO 90 kDA ANTIGENS From PISCIRICKETTSIA SALMONIS
[0150] Potential
Piscirickettsia salmonis antigens were identified by screening a
P.
salmonis DNA expression library with polyclonal antibodies raised against
P.
salmonis as follows:
DNA was isolated from P. salmonis and partially digested with the restriction enzyme, Sau3Al. The isolated DNA was then cloned into the vector λGEM-12 (Promega) at a BamHI site. λ phage structural proteins were then added and the phages were assembled.
A phage library was produced containing 13,750 different phages. The library then
was amplified in an E. coli host strain.
[0151] The library was next transferred to the pGEM-5zf (+) vector (Promega)
via the
NotI site. An
E. coli strain was transformed with the library, grown in the presence of ampicillin, and selected
for ampicillin resistance. Clones were screened by replica plating using nitrocellulose
membranes. Following the lysis of the bacteria on the nitrocellulose membranes, the
membranes were blocked with milk and then incubated with anti-
P.
salmonis polyclonal antibodies produced by immunizing rabbits with formaldehyde killed
P.
salmonis bacteria. Next, the membranes were washed and then developed with goat anti-rabbit-HRP
conjugate. To detect recircularised plasmids that did not contain the inserts, the
membranes were also exposed to X-gal. One isolated clone, designated 1057, appeared
to express a 70-90 kDa protein. However, this putative 70-90 kDa protein was not purified,
nor was it further characterized.
[0152] Initially, a Chilean strain of
Yersinia ruckeri, a non-human enteric bacterium, was selected as the recombinant host cell to express
the 70-90 kDa protein for possible use in a vaccine against SRS. This selection was
based on the conventional wisdom that bacterial surface antigens are difficult to
express in traditional bacterial vectors, particularly when the desired use for the
recombinant vector would be as a vaccine antigen. Thus, it was believed the method
of choice for expressing a
P. salmonis surface antigen, as the 70-90 kDa protein was suspected of being, would be such a
non-human enteric bacterium. Indeed, US Published Patent Application No.
US20070207165 (A1) and
WO2006037383(A1) specifically teach the use of such a recombinant
Yersinia ruckeri vector to express
P. salmonis proteins, and specifically exemplify the successful use of this vector to express
the
Psp45 protein. In fact, this project was deemed completed when a recombinant
Yersinia vector was isolated that was believed to encode the P. salmonis 70-90 kDa protein.
[0153] However, the isolated recombinant
Yersinia vector was fraught with stability and expression problems. Indeed, it was never clear
what this recombinant
Yersinia vector expressed, and more importantly, never clear whether this recombinant
Yersinia vector ever actually encoded a
P. salmonis 70-90 kDa protein.
[0154] After considerable time and effort, this recombinant
Yersinia vector was abandoned. The project was picked up again by sequencing the DNA of the
parent clone 1057 clone. Surprisingly, rather than encoding one P. salmonis 70-90
kDa protein, it was found to contain 11 foreign open reading frames (ORFs). Furthermore,
two of these open reading frames, ORF1 and ORF2, unexpectedly were found to encode
approximately 90 kDa proteins. The sequences encoding these seemingly unrelated proteins
were designated ORF1 (the
Psp
1 90 protein) and ORF2 (the
Psp
2 90 protein). The finding of 11 open reading frames, two of which encoded 90 kDa proteins,
proves that the original assumption that the 1057 clone encoded a single
P.
salmonis antigen of about 90 kDa was incorrect.
[0155] The proteins encoded by ORF1 and ORF2 were further characterized. The protein encoded
by ORF 1 (
Psp
1 90) was found to have six predictive hydrophobic regions, whereas the protein encoded
by ORF 2 (
Psp
2 90) was found to have only a single hydrophobic region.
[0156] The
P. salmonis DNA sequence encoding
Psp
1 90 (ORF1).

[0157] The amino acid sequence of
Psp
1 90 (ORF1):

[0158] The
P. salmonis DNA sequence encoding
Psp
290 (ORF2);

[0159] The amino acid sequence of
Psp
2 90 (ORF2):

[0160] The DNA sequences encoding ORF 1 and ORF 2 were then optimized for
E. coli codon usage, avoiding internal TATA boxes, chi sites and ribosomal entry sites, and AT
or GC rich sequences. Synthetic genes were made and cloned via pPCR-Script into pEGT1
(the vector was constructed by EGT, and contains a T7/lac promoter, f1 origin, is
Kanamycin resistant, (KanR), and Hok-Sok). Western blot analyses with anti-peptide
antibodies to ORF 1 and ORF 2 confirmed expression of approximately 90 kDa proteins
from both ORF 1 and ORF 2.
[0161] The
E.coli optimized DNA sequence encoding
Psp
1 90 (ORF1); ORF1 sequences in pEGT1 (EGT optimised sequences):

[0162] The
E.coli optimized DNA sequence encoding
Psp
2 90 (ORF2); ORF2 sequences in pEGT1 (EGT optimised sequences). Note the corresponding
E.coli optimized
Psp
2 90 amino acid sequence begins with an N-terminal histidine instead of the N-terminal
proline for the naturally occurring
Psp
290 protein.

EXAMPLE 2
EXPRESSION Of The TWO 90 kDA ANTIGENS From PISCIRICKETTSIA SALMONIS
Upstream Process
[0163] Batches of the two 90 kDa antigens were produced,
[0164] The strains used were as follows:
E. coli HMS174(DE3)/ pEGT1 /AL-ORF1- 90kDa (Psp1 90)
E. coli HMS174(DE3)/ pEGT1 /AL-ORF2- 90kDa (Psp2 90)
[0165] The strains were grown in shake-flasks. Each batch was prepared as a pool of 5 shake
flasks.
The protocol was as follows:
[0166]
- 1. 50 µl of a glycerol stock was grown in 200mL of YES medium [30 g/l yeast extract,
5 g/l NaCl], supplemented with kanamycin 100 mg/l [500 ml medium in a 2 L shake-flask].
- 2. The culture was incubated at 37 °C, with an agitation of 270 rpm.
- 3. When the OD600 reached 2.1, protein expression was induced by the addition of 1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
("IPTG").
- 4. The final OD600 was around 2.2 for the ORF1-strain, and 1.7 for the ORF2-strain.
- 5. At the end of the culture, the pellets were harvested by centrifugation (5000 g,
30 min., 4 °C) and the supernatant discarded.
- 6. Pellets were collected and stored at -20°C.
- 7. Cell breakage: Pellets were resuspended in 115 mL 20mM Tris buffer pH 7 for the
ORF1-antigen and in 85 ml 20mM Tris buffer pH 7 for the ORF2-antigen. A French Press
was used to break the cells and 2 cycles were performed (40K; 1000PSI; room temperature,
all samples are keep on ice). Volumes collected were 120 ml for the ORF1-antigen and
75ml for the ORF2-antigen. The samples were stored at -20 °C.
EXAMPLE 3
Purfication of PISCIRICKETTSIA SALMONIS 90 kDa ANTIGENS
DOWNSTREAM PROCESS
[0167] 120 ml of the ORF1 antigen (
Psp
1 90) and 75 ml of the ORF2 (
Psp
2 90) antigen samples prepared according to Example 2 were semi-purified using a 300
kDa ultrafiltration. The retentates were concentrated to 50 ml and then diafiltered
against 5 volumes of 20 mM Tris, pH 7.5. Both antigens were found to be in the retentate
fractions forming large aggregates. The two antigens were then formulated by diafiltration
with PBS buffer (137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 8 mM Na
2HPO
4.12 H
2O, 1.5 mM KH
2PO
4, pH = 7.45) using a 300 kDa molecular weight cut-off ultrafiltration membrane.
EXAMPLE 4
Formulation Of Vaccines
[0168] 125 ml of the 300-kDa retentates, as produced by Example 3, were then diafiltrated
against 5 volumes of PBS buffer (137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 8 mM Na
2HPO
4.12 H
2O, 1.5 mM KH
2PO
4, pH = 7.45). The retentates containing the respective ORF-1 and ORF-2 90-kDa-antigens
were collected and stored at - 20°C. The antigens were then sterile filtered through
0.2 µm filters prior to vaccine blending.
[0169] The final protein concentration for the two antigens preparations were 0.089 mg/ml
for ORF1 and 0.015 mg/ml of ORF2. SDS PAGE gels were run and scanned in order to determine
the ratio of the 90 kDa antigens to total protein. The ORF1 antigen was found to be
25.7 % of the total protein and the ORF 2 antigen was found to be 8.3 %. Final concentrations
of the specific antigens were therefore 0.023 mg/ml for ORF 1 (
Psp
1 90) and 0.0012 mg/ml for ORF 2 (
Psp
2 90).
The vaccines were blended as follows:
[0170] The oil based adjuvant Montanide ISA 711 (Seppic) was used in a 70:30 (adjuvant:antigen)
ratio.
| Blend 1 (90 kDa ORF1) |
15 ml (0.345 mg) antigen, 35 ml adjuvant |
| Blend 2 (90 kDa ORF2) |
15 ml (0.018 mg) antigen, 35 ml adjuvant |
| Blend 3 (PBS control) |
15 ml PBS, 35 ml adjuvant |
Following mixing of the aqueous and oil phases, each of the respective vaccines was
homogenised by serial passages through a syringe.
EXAMPLE 5
LABORATORY EFFICACY TRIAL Of VACCINATION Of ATLANTIC SALMON (SALMO SALAR) AGAINST SRS
[0171] The vaccines prepared according to Example 4 above, were tested for efficacy employing
a challenge with
P. salmonis at VESO Vikan, Norway.
[0172] Atlantic salmon (
Salmo salar L., AquaGen Standard) were vaccinated at an average weight of 16.1 g in fresh water.
Water temperature was 12 °C to 15 °C ± 1°C during the immunisation period and 15 °C
± 1°C during the
P. salmonis challenges. The water flow rate was 0.8 l/ kg fish per min. The fish density was
a maximum of 40 kg/m
3.
[0173] Fish were acclimatised for 18 days after arrival at VESO Vikan. 105 fish were anesthetized
and injected with 0.1 ml of each vaccine per fish, and a control group of 105 fish
was anesthetized and injected with 0.1 ml of physiological saline with 0.9% NaCl per
fish. The fish were tagged with ink and by fin cutting. The test groups and the control
group were pooled after vaccination. 12 days before challenge the fish were sorted
into two parallel tanks, with 50 fish per group per tank. 10 days before challenge
the water temperature was raised to 15°C.
Laboratory efficacy trial - challenge
[0174] 48-52 fish from each group were challenged with
P. salmonis by intraperitoneal injection in two duplicate tanks 8 weeks after vaccination. The
same challenge dose was used in both tanks (0.1 ml 1:1000 dilution per fish, and the
dose was determined following prechallenge experiments). The temperature in the rearing
water was 15°C during the challenge. The challenge material was grown at The National
Veterinary Institute, Oslo and was kept at -75°C until challenge. On the day of challenge,
the challenge material was dose adjusted according to the results obtained in the
pre-challenge. The challenge material was diluted in PBS with 1.3 % NaCl.
[0175] Relative percentage survival (RPS
60) was calculated on the day that control group mortality equalled exactly 60 % or,
if inappropriate, at the time corresponding to 60 % control group mortality (t60)
according to the expression:

[0176] In cases where control-group mortality did not equal exactly 60% on any given day
of the trial, cumulative mortality of vaccinates at the time corresponding to 60 %
control group mortality was estimated from the expression.

[0177] The following definitions apply to the parameters of the first and second expressions,
above.
- MV60 =
- cumulative mortality of vaccinates at 60% cumulative control group mortality.
- MC60-1 =
- number of mortalities in control group on last day before cumulative mortality rate in control group exceeds 60%.
- MC60+1 =
- number of mortalities in control group on first day after cumulative mortality rate in control group has exceeded 60%.
- MV60-1 =
- number of mortalities in vaccinated group on last day before cumulative mortality rate in control group exceeds 60%.
- MV60+1 =
- number of mortalities in vaccinated group on first day after cumulative mortality rate in control group has exceeded 60%.
- nc =
- total number of fish in control group.
- nv =
- total number of fish in vaccinated group
- RPS60 =
- Relative percentage survival at 60% control group mortality.
[0178] RPS
60 was subsequently calculated from the first expression, with the following results.
Results
[0179] Results for the challenge are summarized by FIG. 1, and by the tables below. As can
be seen in FIG. 1, the challenged animals vaccinated by saline control (diamonds)
or adjuvant control (squares) exhibited up to about 75% mortality by days 25-30 post
challenge. In contrast, animals vaccinated with the ORF-1 antigen (
Psp
1 90), denoted by "X" and the ORF-2 antigen (
Psp
290) denoted by triangles, exhibited both delayed and reduced mortality. In particular,
animals vaccinated with ORF-2 (
Psp
290) exhibited no more than 5% mortality out to day 32.
[0180] Cumulative mortality as defined by RPS60
TABLE 4
| Tanks A and B were set up with a random mix of vaccinated and saline vaccinated fish. |
| Vaccine |
RPS60 Tank A |
RPS60 Tank B |
Mean RPS60 |
| 90 kDa ORF 1 (Psp1 90) |
96.8 |
100.0 |
98.4 |
| 90 kDa ORF 2 (Psp2 90) |
50.0 |
77.1 |
63.6 |
| Adjuvant + PBS |
2.0 |
11.7 |
6.9 |
[0181] In order for the test results to be acceptable, mortalities in the control group
must reach 60 % within 30 days after the first specific mortality has been recorded.
As the results met these criteria the results were accepted as valid.
[0182] The results therefore demonstrate that both the 90 kDa ORF 1 antigen (
Psp
1 90) and the 90 kDa ORF 2 antigen (
Psp
290) are capable to provide significant protection in salmon against SRS caused by
P. salmonis.
EXAMPLE 6
Production Method Of VP2var or VP3 (50 Liter Scale)
[0183] The yeast strains: Pichia pastoris GS115 - pPICZαB - VP2var. The
Pichia expression system is used to express the IPN protein antigens [Research Corporation
Technologies, Tucson, Arizona, see
U.S. Patent Nos. 4,808,537,
4,837,148,
4,879,231, the contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
[0184] Preculture: A 2-liter baffled shake-flask containing 400 ml of YSG+ (see below) is inoculated
with 600 µl of the above-identified yeast strain. The culture is incubated at 30 °C,
with an agitation of 270 rpm, during 23 - 25 hours. The optical density at 600nm (OD
600nm) is >15 units (using a NOVASPEC II spectrophotometer), as set forth by Table 5, below.
TABLE 5
| Composition of the Medium YSG+: |
| COMPONENTS |
CONCENTRATION |
| Yeast Extract |
6 g/l |
| Papaïc Soy Pepton |
5 g/l |
| Glycerol |
20 g/l |
[0185] Fermentation: The fermentor Braun D50 is prepared with 50 liters of growth medium (SAPPEY, see
below). The fermentor is inoculated with a volume (V
preculture) of preculture determined by the equation:

Where, V
fermentor is defined as the volume of the growth medium in the fermentor, and the OD
600preculture is the optical density determined at 600 nm of the preculture solution obtained above.
TABLE 6
| Parameters for Fermentation |
| PARAMETERS |
SET POINTS |
| pH |
6* |
| Temperature |
30°C |
| Air-flow |
80 l/min. |
| PO2 |
30% ** |
| Agitation |
400-(600) rpm |
| Pressure |
100 mbar |
* regulation with acid (HNO3 10 %) and base (NH4OH 12.5%)
** with an action on the agitation to maintain the PO2 at 30% Automatic regulation of foam with SAG471. |
TABLE 7
| Composition of Growth Medium SAPPEY per 1 Liter: |
| Components |
Volumes |
| Base solution |
900 ml |
| Complement solution 1 |
100 ml |
| PTM1 solution |
4.76 ml |
TABLE 8
| Quantities per 1 Liter of Base Solution |
| [The solution is autoclaved in the fermentor (20 min., 121°C)] |
| Components |
Quantity |
| Yeast Extract |
11.11 g/l |
| Papaïc Soy Pepton |
22.22 g/l |
| Antifoam SAG471 |
0.11 ml/l |
TABLE 9
| Quantities per 1 Liter of COMPLEMENT SOLUTION 1 |
| (The solution is sterilised by filtration with a 0.22µm pore membrane) |
| Components |
Quantity |
| K2HPO4 |
23 g/l |
| KH2PO4 |
118 g/l |
| Glycerol |
100 g/l |
TABLE 10
| Quantity for 1 Liter of PTM1 SOLUTION |
| Components |
Quantity |
| CuSO4.5H2O |
6 g/l |
| Nal |
0.08 g/l |
| MnSO4.H2O |
3 g/l |
| Na2MoO4.2H2O |
0.2 g/l |
| H3BO3 |
0.02 g/l |
| CoCl2.6H2O |
0.92 g/l |
| ZnCl2 |
20 g/l |
| FeSO4.7H2O |
65 g/l |
| d-biotine |
0.2 g/l |
| H2SO4 |
5 ml/l |
[0186] The solution is sterilized by filtration with a 0.22µm pore membrane. The PTM1 solution
must be added in the fermentor separately from the complement solution 1.
TABLE 11
| Composition of "INDUCTION SOLUTIONS" per 1 Liter |
| (The methanol is added by sterile filtration with a 0.22µm pore membrane) |
| |
Components |
Volumes |
| |
Methanol 100 % |
6.3 ml/l of culture |
| |
Yeast Extract solution |
22.5 ml/l of culture |
TABLE 12
| Quantity for 1 Liter of YEAST EXTRACT SOLUTION |
| [This solution is autoclaved (20 min., 121°C)] |
| Components |
Quantity |
| Yeast Extract |
222 g/l |
[0187] After 24 hours of growth, a first induction of recombinant protein expression is
realized by the addition of methanol and yeast extract solution. At this moment, the
OD
600nm is greater than about 10 units. After the induction the pO
2 decreases quickly. After about 1 hour, it increases slowly to saturation. A second
induction is realized after 48 hours of culture in the same conditions. The OD
600nm reached is greater than about 13 units. After 72 hours of growth, the fermentor is
cooled to a temperature lower than 20°C. The OD
600nm reached is greater than about 13 units.
[0188] Harvest and filling: The cells from the fermentor are then harvested. The culture is centrifuged (5000g,
4°C, 20 min) in order to eliminate the pellets. The supernatant is aseptically filtrated
with a 0.2 µm pore membrane (Sartobran P) and 2.5 liter aliquots are placed into one
gallon bottles. These bottles are then stored at -20°C.
EXAMPLE 7
AN INJECTABLE VACCINE FOR SRS, IPN AND FURUNCULOSIS
Summary
[0189] One injectable vaccine of the present invention is a water-in-oil type vaccine that
comprises a suspension of:
- (i) two inactivated strains of Aeromonas salmonicida (MT004 and MT423),
- (ii) two recombinant IPN viral proteins (VP2 and VP3) or antigenic fragments thereof,
that are expressed by transformed yeast, Pichia pastoris in 0.85% p/v sterile saline, and
- (iii) a suspension comprising inactivated recombinant strains of E.coli encoding Psp1 90 and/or Psp2 90, in phosphate buffered saline.
[0190] The VP2 (VP2var) recombinant proteins are expressed by transformed yeast,
Pichia pastoris BCCM Accession No. IHEM 20069 and/or BCCM Accession No. IHEM 20070, whereas the VP3
recombinant proteins are expressed by BCCM Accession No. IHEM 20071, and/or BCCM Accession
No. IHEM 20072. The oily adjuvant is MONTANIDE ISA711 and constitutes 70% of the vaccine's
total volume. The formulation may contain residual amounts of formaldehyde, derived
from inactivation of the cultures.
[0191] This particular vaccine is designed and recommended for administration by intraperitoneal
injection, to protect against salmonid rickettsial septicaemia, infectious pancreatic
necrosis and furunculosis in fish, more particularly salmonids, and even more particularly,
in salmon.
Presentation
[0192] This vaccine is presented in 500 ml high density polyethylene infusion flasks, closed
with grey nitrile stoppers and having aluminium seals. The bottles and stoppers comply
with the requirements of the relevant monographs of the European Pharmacopoeia (Ph.
Eur). The containers are autoclaved at 121° C for 20 minutes. The stoppers are autoclaved
at 121° C for 60 minutes.
Production
Production of A. salmonicida MT004 Antigen:
[0193] An ampoule of lyophilized work seed is removed from storage and is reconstituted
and incubated. This culture is then inoculated in 4 liters of sterile iron-deficient
TSB to form the production culture, and then incubated at approximately 21.5° C for
36-48 hours.
[0194] The resulting culture is then aseptically inoculated in 15-18 liters of sterile iron-deficient
TSB. It is incubated at approximately 21.5 °C for 24 to 48 hours. Then a solution
of sterile formaldehyde is added to the flasks to inactivate the culture. Each culture
is mixed vigorously following the addition of the formaldehyde solution and is then
transferred aseptically to a sterile storage bottle. The culture is kept at approximately
22° C for 96-100 hours to ensure the inactivation of bacterial cultures and protease
activity. The formaldehyde is neutralized by the addition of a solution of 15% sodium
metabisulfite. Neutralisation is completed in 20-24 hours at a temperature of approximately
22° C. The inactivated harvests are stored at 2-8° C until they are required for mixing.
The production
of A. salmonicida MT004 antigen can also be performed as described below for MT423.
Production of A. salmonicida MT423 Antigen:
[0195] An ampoule of lyophilized work seed is removed from storage and reconstituted and
incubated. This culture is then inoculated in 300 ml of sterile iron-supplemented
TSB to form the production culture, and then incubated at approximately 21.5° C for
36-48 hours.
[0196] The culture is next inoculated aseptically in 4 liters of sterile iron-supplemented
TSB. It is incubated at approximately 21.5° C for 36 to 48 hours. The culture of production
seed is transferred aseptically to 150 liters of sterile iron-supplemented TSB in
a fermentor and incubated at approximately 21.5° C for 20-24 hours.
[0197] Then a solution of sterile formaldehyde is added to the culture flasks to inactivate
them. Each culture is mixed vigorously following the addition of the formaldehyde
solution and is transferred aseptically to a sterile storage bottle. The culture is
kept at approximately 22° C for 96-100 hours to ensure inactivation of the bacterial
cultures and protease activity. The formaldehyde is neutralized by adding a solution
of 15% sodium metabisulfite. Neutralization is completed in 20-24 hours at a temperature
of approximately 22° C. The inactivated harvests are stored at 2-8° C until they are
required for mixing
Production of Recombinant Proteins IPN (VP2 VAR) and IPN VP3:
[0198] Recombinant proteins IPN (VP2 VAR) and IPN VP3 are prepared and stored as described
in Example 6 above.
Production of Antigens of Piscirickettsia salmonis:
[0199] The
Psp
1 90 and
Psp
2 90 antigens are prepared for the formulation of the vaccine as described in Example
4 above.
Mixing of the Final Vaccine
[0200] Bulk antigens are mixed with the other antigen components, phosphate-buffered saline
solution, and the oil component to obtain a bulk vaccine of the desired cell concentration.
[0201] The volumes of bulk antigens required (calculated on the individual concentrations
of bulk antigen, the required concentrations of these in the end product and the batch
size) are removed from storage. The bulk antigens are transferred to cool, sterile
containers and are mixed thoroughly.
[0202] The volume of sterile saline required is calculated and transferred aseptically to
the mixed bulk antigens. The antigens and saline are thoroughly mixed and the pH is
adjusted to pH 7.0 - 7.4 with 10 M sodium hydroxide or 10 M hydrochloric acid (aqueous
phase).
[0203] The weight of sterile oily phase required is calculated and transferred aseptically
to a sterile mixing container. The oily and aqueous phases are emulsified for 5 minutes
at approximately 3000 rpm. The emulsified mix is maintained at ambient temperature
for 24 hours. The mix is placed in the final containers, with a nominal fill value
of 505 ml. The stoppers are inserted aseptically and the seals are applied. Each container
is labeled, packaged and stored at +2° C to +8° C under quarantine until released
for sale. The batch size varies according to production requirements and is normally
within the range of 100 liters to 1500 liters.
Materials
[0204] Piscirickettsia salmonis antigens are prepared as described above. In addition two
strains of
Aeromonas salmonicida are used, which derive from isolated naturally infected fish obtained from fish farmed
in Scotland.
In spite of the fact that there is no evidence that there is any serological distinction
between different strains of
Aeromonas salmonicida, there is a scientific basis for including more than one strain in this vaccine. This
is due to the fact that different isolated ones may be A-layer positive or negative.
Considering that the presence or absence of this layer may not be directly linked
to virulence, the absence of an A-layer allows greater exposure to outer membrane
proteins (OMPs), and in particular, those OMPs produced only under conditions of iron
restriction, as may occur during the infection process. As a result, the production
and immunological availability of the iron restriction outer membrane proteins (IROMPs)
is thought to be important to the efficacy of the vaccine.
Aeromonas salmonicida (MT004):
[0205] The MT004 strain is an A-layer negative strain which is cultivated under conditions
of iron restriction. Development under these conditions results in the production
of specific iron restriction outer membrane proteins that stimulate the production
of bacterial antibodies following intraperitoneal inoculation.
[0206] The strain was originally isolated from dying Atlantic salmon during an outbreak
of furunculosis in on a salmon farm on the
West Coast of Scotland in October 1985. It was passaged through tryptone soya broth six times and remained virulent to the
host animal.
Aeromonas salmonicida (MT423):
[0207] The MT423 strain is an A-layer positive strain that has been cultivated in a fermentor
under conditions of iron restriction. A-layer is a component of successful
A. salmonicida vaccines and supplementation with iron has increased the protection afforded by the
furunculosis vaccine.
[0208] The MT423 strain was isolated from sick Atlantic salmon from a salmon farm at Stirling
University. It was passaged 16 times in Atlantic salmon and remained virulent to the
host animal and is therefore appropriate for use as a vaccine strain.
[0209] Both strains are inactivated by exposure to formaldehyde, being in non-infecting
organisms, whereas it retains its ability to stimulate an immune response in vaccinated
fish.
[0210] The vaccine also contains the recombinant proteins VP2 var and VP3 of IPNV as described
in Example 6 above.
[0211] Other Reagents are provided in Table 13:
TABLE 13
| Reagents |
| REAGENT |
COMPONENTS |
CHARACTERISTICS |
| |
Pancreatic casein digestive enzyme |
Cow's milk from herds certified BSE free, originally from France, but currently from
New Zealand. Porcine enzymes from France, Italy and Holland. |
| Tryptone Soya Broth (TSB) |
Soya digestive papain |
No materials of biological origin |
| |
Sodium chloride |
|
| |
Hydrogenated dipotassium phosphate |
|
| |
Dextrose |
Synthetic or of non-animal origin |
| |
Purified water |
Meets the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| Hydrochloric acid (pH adjustment) |
- |
Meets the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| Sodium hydroxide (pH adjustment) |
- |
Meets the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| Formaldehyde (Inactivator) |
- |
Meets the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| Saline solution (Diluent) |
Sodium chloride |
Meets the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| Purified water |
Meets the requirements of the European Pharmacopoeia. |
| Montanide ISA711 (Adjuvant) |
Contains oleic acid |
EDQM Certified available |
Assays
[0212] Several tests are carried out to ensure that the consistency and quality of the vaccine
and its components are maintained. These tests are described below.
Aeromonas salmonicida Strains MT004 and MT423:
[0213] The test methods used for both antigens are the same, except that the test for the
presence of IROMPS is not used for the MT423 strain, since this is multiplied in an
iron-enriched medium. In addition, the criteria used for some tests are different
for each strain. For the sake of simplicity, the following test descriptions specify
the criterion for each strain where it is appropriate.
Purity Tests - Gram Stain:
[0214] Gram stain purity tests are carried out on each subculture during multiplication
from seed to production culture. The test provides a rapid indication that the cultivated
organism has the hoped for microscopic appearance and that no atypical organism is
present.
[0215] The test method is a simple Gram stain that uses conventional techniques and materials.
Known Gram positive and negative control organisms are stained each time to confirm
that staining and discoloration are appropriate. The test sample must only show small
Gram negative rods.
Purity Test and Characteristics of the Culture:
[0216] An additional purity test is carried out on each of the 20 liter complete cultures
and on the culture in the final fermentor. The test confirms the purity of the culture
and contributes to global identity security. A sample of the culture is grown on plates
of tryptone soya agar and incubated at 22° C for at least 48 hours, long enough for
the different colonies to become visible. Plates inoculated with the test culture
must exhibit only one type of bacterial colony. These colonies must be typical of
Aeromonas salmonicida.
[0217] The
Aeromonas salmonicida MT004 strain forms semi-translucent, round, convex, cream-colored colonies with regular
edges. A red-brown pigmentation is produced which spreads through the medium after
around 24 hours of culture. The
Aeromonas salmonicida MT423 strain: Semi-translucent, round, convex, cream-colored colonies with regular
edges, but developing more slowly than the MT004 strain.
[0218] Identity of the culture: The identity of a given culture is confirmed in the samples on final fermentation.
Identity tests are carried out on the final culture prior to inactivation to confirm
that the correct organism has been cultured. It must be emphasized that none of these
tests can differentiate the strains, but all contribute to the security of identifying
the species. In addition to the purity tests, identity is confirmed by means of biochemical
and agglutination characteristics:
- Demonstration of the use of glucose without gas production.
A sample from the final culture is inoculated in peptone water containing 1% glucose
and phenol red in tubes containing an inverted Durham tube. The inoculated cultures
are incubated at 22° C for 24-48 hours. The test sample must show the use of glucose,
indicated by acid production, without gas being produced.
- Demonstration of positive metabolism of cytochrome oxidase using commercially available
impregnated filter papers:
A single colony from the purity test plate (culture characteristics) is spread over
the filter paper. A positive result is indicated by the development of a pinkish purple
pigment while a negative result is indicated by no color change. The cultures must
generate a pinkish purple coloration on the test paper, indicating positive cytochrome
oxidase metabolism.
- Lattes cover-glass test using a diagnostic kit of pathogens from commercial fish (Bionor
MONO-AS - Code DD020).
A single colony from the purity test plate (culture characteristics) is mixed with
a drop of antiserum on a microscope slide. The test uses a specific rabbit antiserum
against Aeromonas salmonicida. A negative control culture is likewise mixed with a drop of antiserum. Positive agglutination
must be observed with the test sample. The negative control sample must not show any
agglutination.
Optical Density:
[0219] Optical density measurements at 580 nm are recorded at the end of each culture in
20 liter bottles and at intervals throughout final fermentation. Optical density measurements
are taken from 20 liter culture bottles to ensure that each of these inoculants has
grown satisfactorily. Optical density measurements are recorded at intervals throughout
final fermentation to determine the optimum time for harvest, as indicated at the
end of the exponential growth phase.
[0220] A sample of the culture is placed in a cuvette and the optical density is measured
directly using a spectrophotometer. If necessary, the sample may be diluted in 0.85%
sterile saline solution in order to obtain opacity within the spectrophotometer's
range. The method is only used to confirm satisfactory growth of the inoculant and
to determine the optimum time for harvest of the final fermentation. The final optical
density reading is not critical and no set criterion applies. However, the final value
obtained from the culture in the fermentor is normally within the following range:
- 8 - 11 for MT004 strain (without iron)
- 13-18 for MT423 strain (iron supplemented)
[0221] The absolute criterion for optical density is not appropriate for several reasons.
First, considering that the medium used is of biological origin, there is inevitably
a variation in the degree to which a specific batch will support growth. Second, the
frequency of sampling for optical density is restricted to 45 minute intervals due
to the need to re-sterilize the sampling port. Consequently, the precise harvest time
may allow the culture to be maintained in the stationary phase for a short period
of time, during which a reduction in optical density may be observed.
Viable Count
[0222] A sample of the culture is taken for the viable count at the end of fermentation
and prior to adding the inactivator. The viable count serves as a definitive measurement
of yield and forms the basis for subsequent mixing of the vaccine. The viable count
is carried out using the Miles and Misra method
[see e.g., Hedges,
Int J Food Microbiol. 25:76(3):207-14 (2002)] with Tryptone Soya Broth as diluent and Tryptone Soya Agar as
growth medium. Suitable ten-fold serial dilutions of the sample are prepared and ten
replicate 0.025ml drops of each dilution placed on the agar plate. The plates are
incubated at 22° C for 24-48 hours. Only those dilutions where colonies may be clearly
counted are used to calculate the viable count.
[0223] The viable count is used as the basis for mixing the vaccine. The actual count is
not critical and no set criterion is applied. However, normal counts are within the
range 0.3 - 1.5 x 10
10/ml for both strains MT004 and MT423. The absolute criterion is not appropriate for
several reasons. First, considering that the medium used is of biological origin,
there is inevitably a variation in the degree to which a specific batch will support
growth.
[0224] Second, the frequency of sampling for optical density is restricted to 45 minute
intervals due to the need to re-sterilize the sampling port. Consequently, the precise
harvest time may allow the culture to be maintained in the stationary phase for a
short period of time, during which a reduction in optical density may be observed.
Protease Test
[0225] The protease test is carried out on a sample of material taken immediately following
the inactivation period, but before the addition of sodium thiosulphate. With the
improved control of the culture's conditions, no release of protease has been observed.
However, because it is possible to sample the culture from the final fermentor at
intervals of no less than 45 minutes, there is the possibility that some cells will
die, and consequently lysis may occur prior to inactivation. This test provides the
reassurance that any protease that may be released is completely inactivated.
Protease Assay:
[0226] 3 ml of inactivated culture is added to 20mg of SKY BLUE powder suspended in 2.5
ml of PBS and incubated for 15 minutes at ambient temperature. A positive control
in which 20 mg of trypsin replaces the test samples is also incubated. The SKY BLUE
powder is insoluble in PBS, but if protease activity is present, the material degrades
and blue dye is released into the solution. The positive control must show a blue
color while negative controls must remain colorless. To be acceptable, the test samples
must not exhibit any protease activity. Positive samples must show a blue coloration.
Inactivation Test
[0227] A specific test for inactivation of the culture is carried out following neutralization
of the residual inactivator. A subsequent test for continuous and complete inactivation
is carried out on the mixed aqueous phase of the vaccine. The test confirms the complete,
satisfactory inactivation of all viable organisms.
Inactivation assay:
[0228] 1 ml of inactivated culture is inoculated in each of six tubes containing 9 ml of
TSB. Two of these inoculated tubes are inoculated with 0.1 ml of positive control
culture with
Aeromonas salmonicida of the same strains as the sample being tested, inoculating with a designated concentration
of between 1 and 10 organisms. Two further inoculated tubes are additionally inoculated
with 0.1 ml using the same positive control culture diluted 1 in 10. Also 0.1 ml of
both positive control preparations are inoculated in two tubes, each containing 9.9
ml of TSB and another two tubes of TSB medium are kept only as negative controls.
Therefore, duplicates of the following tubes are prepared (a total of 12 tubes in
all):
- Inoculated with 1 ml of test sample
- Inoculated with 1 ml of test sample + 0.1 ml positive control
- Inoculated with 1 ml of test sample + 0.1 ml positive control (diluted 1/10)
- Inoculated with 0.1 ml positive control
- Inoculated with 0.1 ml positive control diluted 1/10
- Not inoculated
[0229] All of the above tubes are incubated for 48 hours at 22° C. At the end of this time,
any tube in which growth cannot be seen is subcultivated. Subcultivation is carried
out by spreading 1 ml of the medium onto each of two plates of tryptone soya agar.
The medium is left to absorb into the agar for 1 hour at ambient temperature and the
plates are incubated (inverted) for 48 hours at 22° C. The original tubes are also
incubated for 48 hours at 22° C.
[0230] At the end of this time, growth (or absence of growth) is recorded in all cultures.
The criterion of being acceptable is that all the tubes inoculated with the test sample
only and all plates inoculated from these must not show any growth. In addition, all
tubes inoculated with the highest concentration of organisms of the positive control
and/or all plates inoculated from these must show growth of the control organism.
If the tubes inoculated exclusively with the lowest dilution of the positive control
culture and/or the plates inoculated from these show growth, similar results must
be observed for the tubes and plates inoculated with the test sample plus the diluted
positive control. The control mediums must remain negative.
Test for IROMPS
[0231] This test only applies to the material of strain MT004 and applies to a sample of
final bulk antigen following inactivation and neutralization but, prior to distributing
the material between the storage containers. The test is a qualitative method for
confirming the presence of typical iron-restricted proteins in the preparation.
[0232] SDS-PAGE electrophoresis is performed on the sample. The SDS-PAGE gels are electroblotted
to PVDF membranes that are then incubated with a rat monoclonal antibody against IROMP.
Coupling of the monoclonal antibody is detected by a conjugate of goat anti-rat alkaline
phosphatase and displayed using a NBT-BCIP substrate. A positive control preparation
of
Aeromonas salmonicida IROMP is spread on the same gel together with the molecular weight markers. The method
is qualitative, but the acceptance criterion requires that the samples exhibit bands
consistent with those of the control preparation. More particularly, protein bands
must be detected at about 70, 72, 77 and 82 kilodaltons.
Steril ity
[0233] The sterility of each container of final bulk antigen is confirmed using a specific
sterility test although the inactivation test also provides additional evidence of
sterility of the bulk product prior to distribution. The test provides the assurance
that each container of bulk antigen is sterile.
[0234] The method used is that indicated in the Ph. Eur. Using direct inoculation thioglycollate
and soya broths are incubated at 32° C and 22° C respectively, and both are subcultivated
after 14 days of incubation. The subcultures are incubated for 7 days, while the original
cultures are incubated for a total of 21 days. The method includes positive control
cultures specified in the Ph. Eur.
[0235] To be acceptable the samples being tested must be sterile. The positive control cultures
must show profuse early growth (within 3 days).
TABLE 14
| SEQUENCES |
| SEQ ID NO.: |
DESCRIPTION |
| 1 |
Nucleotide sequence encoding the genomic 1057 ORF 1 gene. |
| 2 |
Amino acid sequence expressed by the ORF 1 gene [Psp190]. |
| 3 |
Nucleotide sequence encoding the genomic 1057 ORF 2 gene. |
| 4 |
Amino acid sequence expressed by the ORF 2 gene [Psp290]. |
| 5 |
Nucleotide sequence encoding the PEGT1 ORF 1 gene. |
| 6 |
Nucleotide sequence encoding the PEGT1 ORF 2 gene. |
| 7 |
Amino acid sequence of the 45 kDa protein. |
| 8 |
Amino acid sequence of the 45 kDa protein minus the signal peptide. |
| 9 |
Amino acid sequence of an AMP binding enzyme homolog. |
| 10 |
Amino acid sequence of ORF A. |
| 11 |
Amino acid sequence of ORF B. |
| 12 |
Amino acid sequence of a DDE endonuclease homolog. |
| 13 |
Amino acid sequence of a transposase homolog. |
| 14 |
Amino acid sequence of an HlyD homolog. |
| 15 |
Amino acid sequence of an AcrB/AcrD/AcrF homolog. |
| 16 |
2,092 nucleotide nucleotide sequence comprising the coding sequence of the 45 kDa
protein. |
SEQUENCE LISTING
[0236]
<110> Schering Plough, LTD
Kirke, David F.
Francis, Michael J.
<120> Vaccine Antigens from Piscirickettsia Salmonis
<130> AH06673
<150> 61/014,782
<151> 2007-12-19
<160> 16
<170> Patent In version 3.4
<210> 1
<211> 2820
<212> DNA
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 1


<210> 2
<211> 939
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 2




<210> 3
<211> 2499
<212> DNA
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 3


<210> 4
<211> 832
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 4




<210> 5
<211> 2820
<212> DNA
<213> EGT Optimized
<400> 5


<210> 6
<211> 2509
<212> DNA
<213> EGT Optimized
<400> 6



<210> 7
<211> 438
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 7


<210> 8
<211> 416
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 8


<210> 9
<211> 367
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 9



<210> 10
<211> 39
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 10

<210> 11
<211> 127
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 11


<210> 12
<211> 74
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 12

<210> 13
<211> 81
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 13


<210> 14
<211> 319
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 14


<210> 15
<211> 572
<212> PRT
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 15




<210> 16
<211> 2092
<212> DNA
<213> Piscirickettsia salmonis
<400> 16

