Abstract
A portion of the toxin A gene ofClostridium difficile was cloned into pBR322 withEscherichia coli Chi 1776 as the host. Five identical clones, each containing a 4.7-kbPstI restriction endonuclease fragment and producing toxin A antigens, were detected with affinity-purified, monospecific antibodies against toxin A. Digestion of the cloned DNA withPstI revealed as internal restriction site that resulted in two fragments (2.1 and 2.6 kb in size). Probe DNA from either of these fragments hybridized with DNA in the 4.7 kb region ofPstI-digested, high-molecular-weight DNA from the sourceC. difficile strain, indicating that the internalPstI site is protected. The probe DNA also hybridized with restriction-digested DNA from five additional toxigenic strains, but it did not hybridize with DNA from four nontoxigenic strains. In addition, a DNA fragment from a toxigenic strain ofClostridium sordellii, whose toxin cross-reacts with antibody toC. difficile toxin A, hybridized with the clonedC. difficile DNA. Unlike native toxin A, the cell lysate from the recombinant clone was not cytotoxic to Chinese hamster ovary cells or enterotoxic in hamsters. It did agglutinate rabbit red blood cells, a characteristic of toxin A. The cell lysate also exhibited a line of partial identity when compared with purified toxin A in Ouchterlony assays, and it reacted with monoclonal antibody to toxin A in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The cloned DNA appears to code for a nontoxic binding portion of toxin A, which is responsible for binding to galactose-α1-3-galactose-β1-4-N-acetylglucosamine.
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