Abstract

Hepatitis E is an emerging global disease, mainly transmitted via the fecal–oral route in developing countries, and in a zoonotic manner in the developed world. Pigs and wild boar constitute the primary Hepatitis E virus (HEV) zoonotic reservoir. Consumption of undercooked animal meat or direct contact with infected animals is the most common source of HEV infection in European countries. The purpose of this study is to develop an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for the detection of anti-hepatitis E virus IgG in pig serum, using plant-produced recombinant HEV-3 ORF2 as an antigenic coating protein, and also to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of this assay. A recombinant HEV-3 ORF2 110-610_6his capsid protein, transiently expressed by pEff vector in Nicotiana benthamiana plants was used to develop an in-house HEV EIA. The plant-derived HEV-3 ORF2 110-610_6his protein proved to be antigenically similar to the HEV ORF2 capsid protein and it can self-assemble into heterogeneous particulate structures. The optimal conditions for the in-house EIA (iEIA) were determined as follows: HEV-3 ORF2 110-610_6his antigen concentration (4 µg/mL), serum dilution (1:50), 3% BSA as a blocking agent, and secondary antibody dilution (1:20 000). The iEIA developed for this study showed a sensitivity of 97.1% (95% Cl: 89.9–99.65) and a specificity of 98.6% (95% Cl: 92.5–99.96) with a Youden index of 0.9571. A comparison between our iEIA and a commercial assay (PrioCHECK™ Porcine HEV Ab ELISA Kit, ThermoFisher Scientific, MA, USA) showed 97.8% agreement with a kappa index of 0.9399. The plant-based HEV-3 ORF2 iEIA assay was able to detect anti-HEV IgG in pig serum with a very good agreement compared to the commercially available kit.

Highlights

  • Vaccines 2021, 9, 991 this study, we developed and optimized an in-house enzyme immunoassay (EIA) designed to detect Hepatitis E virus (HEV) serum antibodies in pigs, using the plant-derived HEV-3 ORF2 110-610_6his recombinant protein

  • Multiple investigations have shown that domestic pigs and wild boar in Bulgaria are widely infected with HEV [23,24,25,26,27]

  • We investigated the potential use of plants in HEV-3 ORF2 capsid protein production, which was used as an immunoassay antigen for HEV serum antibody detection in pigs

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatitis E viral (HEV) infections are currently the most common cause of acute hepatitis in the world. The vast majority of Hepatitis E cases present as a self-limited acute illness, which in rare cases, primarily in immunocompromised individuals, can become chronic. The overall case-fatality rate is about 1%, but in pregnant women in their third trimester, it can reach up to 30% [2]. HEV is a quasi-enveloped (in blood) and non-enveloped (in feces), positive-sense single-stranded RNA virus [3], classified in the Hepeviridae family, genus Orthohepevirus

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