Abstract

Serum Bactericidal Activity (SBA) assay is the method of choice to evaluate the complement-mediated functional activity of both infection- and vaccine-induced antibodies. To perform a typical SBA assay, serial dilutions of sera are incubated with target bacterial strains and complement. The conventional SBA assay is based on plating on agar the SBA reaction mix and counting the surviving bacterial colony forming units (CFU) at each serum dilution. Even with automated colony counting, it is labor-intensive, time-consuming and not amenable for large-scale studies. Here, we have developed a luminescence-based SBA (L-SBA) method able to detect surviving bacteria by measuring their ATP. At the end of the SBA reaction, a single commercially available reagent is added to each well of the SBA plate, and the resulting luminescence signal is measured in a microplate reader. The signal obtained is proportional to the ATP present, which is directly proportional to the number of viable bacteria. Bactericidal activity is subsequently calculated. We demonstrated the applicability of L-SBA with multiple bacterial serovars, from 5 species: Citrobacter freundii, Salmonella enterica serovars Typhimurium and Enteritidis, Shigella flexneri serovars 2a and 3a, Shigella sonnei and Neisseria meningitidis. Serum bactericidal titers obtained by the luminescence readout method strongly correlate with the data obtained by the conventional agar plate-based assay, and the new assay is highly reproducible. L-SBA considerably shortens assay time, facilitates data acquisition and analysis and reduces the operator dependency, avoiding the plating and counting of CFUs. Our results demonstrate that L-SBA is a useful high-throughput bactericidal assay.

Highlights

  • The Serum Bactericidal Activity (SBA) assay assesses the complement-dependent bactericidal activity of antibodies in sera against bacterial isolates

  • We showed that luminescence-based SBA (L-SBA) can be used with a range of different microorganisms: Citrobacter freundii, Salmonella enterica serovars Typhimurium and Enteritidis, Shigella flexneri serotypes 2a and 3a, Shigella sonnei, and Neisseria meningitidis serogroups A and W, allowing determination of bactericidal titers of different post-immunization mouse sera

  • Higher bacterial concentrations were not tested because we have already shown that higher starting colony forming units (CFU)/mL translates into a higher resistance to complement-mediated killing, requiring very high amount of baby rabbit serum (BRS) (75%) [23]

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Summary

Introduction

The Serum Bactericidal Activity (SBA) assay assesses the complement-dependent bactericidal activity of antibodies in sera against bacterial isolates. This assay is the method of choice to evaluate the complement-mediated functional activity of both infection- and vaccine-induced antibodies [1,2,3]. Following the acquisition of Novartis Vaccines Institute for Global Health by the GSK group of companies in March 2015, all authors are permanent employees of the GSK group of companies. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials

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