Abstract

Vibriosis is a commonly found bacterial disease identified among fish and shellfish cultured in saline waters. A multitude of Vibrio species have been identified as the causative agents. LamB, a member of outer membrane protein (OMPs) family of these bacteria is conserved among all Vibrio species and has been identified as an efficient vaccine candidate against vibriosis. Rootless duckweed (Wolffia) is a tiny, edible aquatic plant possessing characteristics suitable for the utilization as a bioreactor. Thus, we attempted to express a protective edible vaccine antigen against fish vibriosis in nuclear-transformed Wolffia. We amplified LamB gene from virulent Vibrio alginolyticus and it was modified to maximize the protein expression level and translocate the protein to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in plants. It was cloned into binary vector pMYC under the control of CaMV 35S promoter and introduced into Wolffia globosa by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. Integration and expression of the LamB gene was confirmed by genomic PCR and RT-PCR. Western blot analysis revealed accumulation of the LamB protein in 8 transgenic lines. The cross-protective property of transgenic Wolffia was evaluated by orally vaccinating zebrafish through feeding fresh transgenic Wolffia and subsequently challenging with virulent V. alginolyticus. High relative percent survival (RPS) of the vaccinated fish (63.3%) confirmed that fish immunized with transgenic Wolffia were well-protected from Vibrio infection. These findings suggest that Wolffia expressed LamB could serve as an edible plant-based candidate vaccine model for fish vibriosis and feasibility of utilizing Wolffia as bioreactor to produce edible vaccines.

Highlights

  • Vibriosis is a serious disease commonly identified among fish and shellfish aquaculture and has become a major limiting factor in the aquaculture industry worldwide

  • Here we focused on exploring the feasibility to express an edible protective vaccine antigen LamB for fish vibriosis in W. globosa

  • LamB outer membrane protein of Vibrio bacteria was selected as the antigenic protein to express in W. globosa

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Vibriosis is a serious disease commonly identified among fish and shellfish aquaculture and has become a major limiting factor in the aquaculture industry worldwide. Expressing Vaccine Antigen for Fish vaccines currently used (especially for viral diseases) come from lab cultured pathogens through attenuation or inactivation, bringing potential risk of residual pathogenic activity. In this regard, recombinant proteins expressed in plant bioreactors are safer and more reliable, as they contain specific components of pathogens with the immunological properties of the original pathogen but not its pathogenic properties [3, 4]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call