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Potency Evaluations of Recombinant Botulinum Neurotoxin A1 Mutants Designed to Reduce Toxicity.

Polrit ViravathanaWilliam H TeppMarite BradshawAmanda PrzedpelskiJoseph T BarbieriSabine Pellett
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2024)
Recombinant mutant holotoxin BoNTs (rBoNTs) are being evaluated as possible vaccines against botulism. Previously, several rBoNTs containing 2-3 amino acid mutations in the light chain (LC) showed significant decreases in toxicity (2.5-million-fold-12.5-million-fold) versus wild-type BoNT/A1, leading to their current exclusion from the Federal Select Agent list. In this study, we added four additional mutations in the receptor-binding domain, translocation domain, and enzymatic cleft to further decrease toxicity, creating 7M rBoNT/A1. Due to poor expression in E. coli , 7M rBoNT/A1 was produced in an endogenous C. botulinum expression system. This protein had higher residual toxicity (LD50: 280 ng/mouse) than previously reported for the catalytically inactive rBoNT/A1 containing only three of the mutations (>10 µg/mouse). To investigate this discrepancy, several additional rBoNT/A1 constructs containing individual sets of amino acid substitutions from 7M rBoNT/A1 and related mutations were also endogenously produced. Similarly to endogenously produced 7M rBoNT/A1, all of the endogenously produced mutants had ~100-1000-fold greater toxicity than what was reported for their original heterologous host counterparts. A combination of mutations in multiple functional domains resulted in a greater but not multiplicative reduction in toxicity. This report demonstrates the impact of production systems on residual toxicity of genetically inactivated rBoNTs.
Keyphrases
  • oxidative stress
  • amino acid
  • wild type
  • binding protein
  • escherichia coli
  • oxide nanoparticles
  • small molecule
  • high resolution
  • nitric oxide
  • cell free
  • simultaneous determination