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Unique Epitopes Recognized by Monoclonal Antibodies against HP-PRRSV: Deep Understanding of Antigenic Structure and Virus-Antibody Interaction

  • Qian Wang ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Qian Wang, Jinmei Peng

    Affiliations Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China, Key Laboratory of Animal Epidemiology and Zoonosis of Ministry of Agriculture, College of Veterinary Medicine and State Key Laboratory of Agribiotechnology, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China

  • Jinmei Peng ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Qian Wang, Jinmei Peng

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Yan Sun,

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Jiazeng Chen,

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Tongqing An,

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Chaoliang Leng,

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Lin Li,

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Hongyuan Zhao,

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

  • Xin Guo,

    Affiliation Key Laboratory of Animal Epidemiology and Zoonosis of Ministry of Agriculture, College of Veterinary Medicine and State Key Laboratory of Agribiotechnology, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China

  • Xinna Ge,

    Affiliation Key Laboratory of Animal Epidemiology and Zoonosis of Ministry of Agriculture, College of Veterinary Medicine and State Key Laboratory of Agribiotechnology, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China

  • Hanchun Yang ,

    tzj@hvri.ac.cn (ZT); yanghanchun1@cau.edu.cn (HY)

    Affiliation Key Laboratory of Animal Epidemiology and Zoonosis of Ministry of Agriculture, College of Veterinary Medicine and State Key Laboratory of Agribiotechnology, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China

  • Zhijun Tian

    Affiliation Division of Swine Infectious Diseases, National Key Laboratory of Veterinary Biotechnology, Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Harbin, China

Abstract

Highly pathogenic porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (HP-PRRSV) is a member of the genus Arterivirus within the family Arteriviridae. N and GP3 proteins are the immunodominance regions of the PRRSV viral proteins. To identify the B-cell linear antigenic epitopes within HP-PRRSV N and GP3 proteins, two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against N and GP3 proteins were generated and characterized, designated as 3D7 and 1F10 respectively. The mAb 3D7 recognized only HuN4-F112 not the corresponding virulent strain (HuN4-F5). It also recognized two other commercial vaccines (JXA1-R and TJM-F92), but not two other HP-PRRSV strains (HNZJJ-F1 and HLJMZ-F2). The B-cell epitope recognized by the mAb 3D7 was localized to N protein amino acids 7–33. Western blot showed that the only difference amino acid between HuN4-F112-N and HuN4-F5-N did not change the mAb 3D7 recognization to N protein. The epitope targeted by the mAb 1F10 was mapped by truncated proteins. We found a new epitope (68-76aa) can be recognized by the mAb. However, the epitope could not be recognized by the positive sera, suggesting the epitope could not induce antibody in pigs. These results should extend our understanding of the antigenic structure of the N protein and antigen-antibody reactions of the GP3 protein in different species.

Introduction

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is an economically devastating viral disease affecting the swine industry worldwide [1]. The disease has many clinical manifestations, but the two most prevalent features are reproductive failure in pregnant sows and respiratory complications in piglets and growing pigs. The etiologic agent, porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (PRRSV), is an enveloped single-stranded positive-sense RNA virus classified in the order Nidovirales, the family Arteriviridae, and the genus Arterivirus, together with equine arteritis virus (EAV), lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus (LDV) of mice, and simian hemorrhagic fever virus (SHFV) [2], [3].

The PRRSV genome contains 10 open reading frames (ORF). ORF1a and ORF1b encode viral replicase polyproteins, which are translated immediately upon viral entry and are then proteolytically processed by virally encoded proteinases into 14 mature nonstructural proteins (NSP1α, NSP1β, NSP2-NSP6, NSP7α, NSP7β, and NSP8-NSP12) [4], [5], [6], [7]. The structural-protein-coding region of PRRV encodes eight structural proteins: GP2, E, GP3, GP4, GP5, M, N, and GP5a [8], [9], [10].

In 2006, a highly pathogenic PRRSV (HP-PRRSV) was reported as the main cause of large-scale outbreaks of PRRS with high mortality in China [11], [12], [13]. Epidemics of the atypical disease caused by this emergent HP-PRRSV have resulted in huge economic losses in the Chinese pig industry since 2006 [11], [14]. To control PRRS in China, an attenuated vaccine HuN4-F112 derived from the highly pathogenic HuN4 was developed by passaging HuN4 in Marc-145 cells [15]. This vaccine has been approved for use in China. Previous studies have shown that there are only a few discontinuous amino acid differences between HuN4-F112 and the corresponding virulent strain (HuN4-F5) [16], whereas their biological characteristics differ greatly. It is scientifically important to identify the antigenic differences between these two strains and to determine the molecular mechanisms underlying the attenuation of the virus. The unglycosylated N protein is highly immunogenic in pigs [17][19] and in mice [20][23]. The GP3 protein is highly glycosylated [17], which plays a role in clearing the viral infection [24] and may be involved in viral neutralization along with the GP5 and M proteins [25]. The localization of viral protein epitopes is very important for determining antigenic structure and virus-antibody interactions at molecular level. In this study, we mapped the B-cell linear epitope of N and GP3 proteins using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), which helped to open new insights on the structure of the N protein and antibody-antigen reaction in different species of the GP3 protein.

Materials and Methods

Ethics statement

Animal experiments were approved by Animal Ethics Committee of Harbin Veterinary Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS) and performed in accordance with animal ethics guidelines and approved protocols. The Animal Ethics Committee approval number was SYXK (Hei) 2011022.

Viruses, cells, plasmids, and sera

HP-PRRSV HuN4 (GenBank accession: EF635006) was isolated in China and its pathogenicity has been characterized [13], [15], [26]. The vaccine strain, HuN4-F112, was obtained by culturing the parent strain, HP-PRRSV HuN4, with passage in Marc-145 cells for 112 passages [15]. TJM-F92 and JXA1-R are commercial vaccines available in China. HP-PRRSV HNZJJ-F1 and HLJMZ-F2 were passaged and the passages are retained in our laboratory. The Marc-145 cell line, SP2/0 cell line, and HEK293T cell line were purchased from ATCC. The eukaryotic expression vectors pCAGGS-HuN4-F112-GP2, GP3, GP4, GP5, M, and N are retained in our laboratory. BL21-pGEX-6P-1-HuN4-GP3-(1-171aa, 41-100aa, 41-55aa, 56-70aa, and 63-77aa) were conserved by our laboratory. PRRSV positive sera (4#, 7#, 28#, and 71#) were obtained from piglets that was immunized with HP-PRRSV HuN4 vaccine strain (HuN4-F112) or/and with HP-PRRSV virulent strain (HuN4-F5) [27].

Production and characterization of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against HuN4-F112

Female BALB/c mice aged 4–6 weeks (from the Laboratory Animal Center of Harbin Veterinary Research Institute, CAAS) were immunized intraperitoneally three times at two-weekly intervals with HuN4-F112 (107.0 TCID50), in Freund’s complete adjuvant (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) for the first immunization and in Freund’s incomplete adjuvant (FICA) for the other two immunizations, and then boosted intraperitoneally with virus only. Three days after the final booster injection, mice were euthanized by Carbon Dioxide and then spleen cells were fused with SP2/0 cells using 50% (v/v) polyethylene glycol (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA). The fused cells were cultured successively in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium (DMEM) (Gibco BRL Co. Ltd., USA) containing HAT (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA), HT (Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) and then in DMEM supplemented only with 20% fetal bovine serum (Hyclone Laboratories Inc., South Logan, UT, USA). The isotypes of the mAbs produced were determined with the Pierce Rapid ELISA Mouse mAb Isotyping Kit (Thermo Scientific, Massachusetts, USA), according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

Indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA)

The hybridomas were screened with IFA for their secretion of the desired antibodies. In brief, Marc-145 cell monolayers were infected with HuN4-F112 at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.1 and incubated for 24–48 h at 37°C. The cells were harvested by digestion and centrifugation, and washed once with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Eight-hole glass slides were coated with the infected cells, air dried, and fixed with cold acetone. IFA was performed using the hybridoma supernatants as the primary antibody and fluorescein-isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (Zsbio, Beijing, China) as the secondary antibody. The samples were analyzed with a fluorescence microscope (Nikon TS100, Japan). The selected clones were subcloned by limiting dilution. Ascites fluids were produced in FICA-primed BALB/c mice.

Transient transfection was performed to identify the structural proteins that combined with the mAbs. 293T cells were transiently transfected with the eukaryotic expression vector pCAGGS-HuN4-F112-GP2, GP3, GP4, GP5, M and N using X-tremeGENE HP DNA Transfection Reagent (Roche, Basel, Switzerland), according to the manufacturer’s protocol. pCAGGS-transfected cells were used as the negative control. And Marc-145 cell monolayers were infected with HuN4-F5, TJM-F92, JXA1-R, HNZJJ-F1 and HLJMZ-F2 at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.1. The cells were harvested and IFA was performed as described above.

Sequencing and alignment of the PRRSV ORF7 gene

Viral RNAs (the six strains mentioned above) were extracted with the RNeasy Plus Mini Kit (Qiagen, Dusseldorf, Germany), and RT-PCR was performed as described previously [28], using forward and reverse primers containing EcoR I and Xho I recognition sites, respectively, to amplify the complete ORF7 sequence (Table 1). The PCR product was cloned into the pMD18-T vector (Takara, Dalian, Japan) and confirmed by sequencing. Sequence alignments were performed with DNAMAN (Lynnon Biosoft, USA).

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Table 1. Primer sets for the amplification of the ORF7 gene and its truncated fragments.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.t001

Expression of recombinant HuN4-F5-N, HuN4-F112-N

The complete ORF7 genes, digested from pMD18-T-HuN4-F5-N and pMD18-T-HuN4-F112-N, were ligated into the expression vector pGEX-6p-1 (Invitrogen, Scotland, UK). Escherichia coli BL21 cells (Takara) were transformed with the confirmed recombinant plasmids and the respective proteins were expressed. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed to analyze the glutathione S-transferase (GST)-HuN4-F5-N and GST-HuN4-F112-N fusion proteins. HuN4-F5 and HuN4-F112 were isolated ultracentrifugally from cell pellets harvested by centrifugation and their immune activity was analyzed directly with Western blot.

Western blot

The cell-expressed GST and the GST-N fusion proteins were separated by 12% SDS-PAGE and the protein samples were then transferred onto nitrocellulose filter membrane (PALL, New York, USA). The membranes were incubated with ascites fluid and anti-GST mAb as the primary antibody. After the membranes were rinsed with PBS, each membrane was treated with IRDye-700-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (LI-COR Biosciences, USA) as the secondary antibody. The proteins were visualized by scanning the membranes with the LI-COR Odyssey infrared image system (LI-COR Biotechnology, USA).

Localization of B-cell linear epitope using overlapping F112-N protein fragments

The ORF7 gene was each divided into four overlapping fragments: NF1-NF4. Specific primers (Table 1) were used to amplify these fragments. The PCR products amplified from these four fragments were cloned separately into the pGEX-6p-1 expression vector and used to transform E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells (Tiangen, Beijing, China), in which the corresponding proteins were expressed. The recombinant proteins were identified by SDS-PAGE and Western blot, as described above. Based on an epitope analysis of the larger fragment of the N protein, NF1 (amino acids 1–42) was serially truncated three by three from the N- and C-termini, respectively (Table 1). These fragments were identified with SDS-PAGE and Western blot, as described above.

Identification of B-cell linear epitope in the GP3 protein

BL21-pGEX-6P-1-HuN4-GP3-(1-171aa, 41-100aa, 41-55aa, 56-70aa, and 63-77aa) were induced and expressed. The protein samples were identified with SDS-PAGE and Western blot using the mAb 1F10, as described above.

Based on an epitope analysis of the larger fragments of the GP3 protein, GP3 63-77aa was serially truncated one by one from the N- and C- termini, respectively (Table 2). The complementary oligonucleotide pairs encoding each peptide were synthesized, annealed and cloned them into the BamHI and XhoI sites of pGEX-6p-1 expression vector, resulting in sixteen recombinant plasmids. The GST fusion proteins were expressed and used to screen the mAb by Western blot as described above.

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Table 2. Primer sets for the amplification of the ORF3 gene and its truncated fragments.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.t002

Sequence alignmenst of the epitope recognized by mAb 3D7 and 1F10

The nucleotide sequences of PRRSV strains from different countries were retrieved from GenBank. The amino acid sequences of the identified B-cell epitope were aligned using the DNAstar MegAlign software (DNASTAR Inc., Madison, WI, USA). The representative PRRSV strains are listed in Table 3.

The mAb 3D7 responses during different passages of HP-PRRSV

HP-PRRSV, HLJMZ-F2, in addition to HuN4, was passaged in Marc-145 cells about 10 times. The different passages were used to inoculate Marc-145 cell monolayers grown for 36 h before viral inoculation. IFA was performed 48 h after inoculation using the the mAb, as described above.

GP3 epitope’s reactivity with PRRSV-positive sera

To detect whether PRRSV-positive sera contained antibodies against the GP3 epitope identified above, the epitope was analyzed by Western blot using PRRSV-positive sera.

Results

Development and identification of mAbs

Two mAbs, 3D7 and 1F10, were generated with IFA detection using HuN4-F112 as the antigen source. The two mAbs specifically recognized N and GP3 proteins expressed by transiently transfected cells (Fig. 1). The mAb 3D7 reacted positively with the Marc-145 cells infected with the HP-PRRSV vaccine strains (JXA1-R and TJM-F92). However, they did not recognize the HP-PRRSVs HuN4-F5, HNZJJ-F1, and HLJMZ-F2 (Fig. 1). The mAb 1F10 recognized the HP-PRRSV HuN4, and commercial vaccine strains (JXA1-R and TJM-F92) (Fig. 1). The isotypes of the mAbs 3D7 and 1F10 were identified with the Pierce Rapid ELISA Mouse mAb Isotyping Kit as IgG1. A neutralization assay was performed as described previously [29], and indicated that the two mAbs did not neutralize PRRSV (data not shown).

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Figure 1. Reactivity of mAbs 3D7 (B) and 1F10 (C) with HP-PRRSV HuN4 and vaccine strains in Marc-145 cells and transiently transfected 293T cells expressing expressing N and GP3 proteins.

HuN4-F112 (attenuated in our laboratory), JXA1-R, and TJM-F92 are commercial vaccines used in China. HuN4, HNZJJ, and HLJMZ are HP-PRRSVs isolated by our laboratory. The two mAbs 3D7 and 1F10 recognized N and GP3 protein expressed by transiently transfected cells. 293T cells pCAGGS-transfected were used as a negative control. Marc-145 cells infected by PRRSV staining with the mAb 3F7 and 293T cells pCAGGS-N/GP3-transfected staining with the mAbs 2E9 and 4G5 were used as positive controls (A). Magnification 200×.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.g001

Mutation analysis of N protein by the mAb 3D7

The IFA result showed that the mAb 3D7 recognized HuN4-F112, but not HuN4-F5 (Fig. 1). When the ORF7 genes of the six strains mentioned above were sequenced, the sequences of the HP-PRRSV strains had no identical difference point compared with those of the vaccine strains. When the N proteins of HuN4-F112 and HuN4-F5, which only differed at one amino acid position (K11 and R11, respectively) were expressed in E. coli BL21, both reacted with the mAb 3D7 (Fig. 2A). Therefore, the amino acid at residue 11 is not a key amino acid.

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Figure 2. Identification of the mAb 3D7 epitope by Western blot.

Western blot analysis of GST-HuN4-F112/F5-N fusion proteins with the mAb 3D7 (A). Lane 1: ultracentrifugal HuN4-F112; lane 2: GST-HuN4-F112-N; lane 3: GST-HuN4-F5-N; lane 4: GST. Truncated fragments were detected with the mAb 3D7 (B). The mAb 3D7 specifically reacted with N protein fragment NF1-3-2 (amino acids 7–33) after three rounds of truncation. F1B is the fragment (amino acids 10–33) identified previously as not recognized by the mAb 3D7 (data not shown), used here as a negative control.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.g002

Identification of B-cell epitopes recognized by the mAbs 3D7 and 1F10

The results described above confirmed that the mAb 3D7 recognized the N protein both in Western blot and in IFA. Four overlapping fragments (NF1, NF2, NF3, and NF4) from ORF7 gene were prepared by PCR and cloned into an expression vector, pGEX-6p-1, for expression as GST fusion proteins. After nucleotide sequencing, the recombinant protein fragments encoded by these constructs were expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells and identified with SDS-PAGE and Western blot with the mAb 3D7. The results showed that NF1 (amino acids 1–42) reacted with the mAb 3D7. NF1 (amino acids 1–42) was then serially truncated three by three from the N- and C-termini, respectively. The NF1-3-2 (amino acids 7–33) was recognized by the mAb 3D7 (Fig. 2B).

Because the mAb 1F10 recognized both HuN4-F112 and HuN4 (Fig. 1), existing BL21-pGEX-6P-1-HuN4-GP3-(1-171aa, 41-100aa, 41-55aa, 56-70aa, and 63-77aa) were induced for 4 h for expression. The recombinant proteins were identified by Western blot using the mAb 1F10. As shown in Fig. 2, the mAb 1F10 recognized GP3 63-77aa. To further clarify the position of the linear antigenic epitope within this domain, short peptides truncated one by one were expressed and identified by Western blot. The data showed that the mAb 1F10 may recognize the minimal epitope GP3 69-76aa. In order to further verify the result, the fusion polypeptides GP3 69-76aa and GP3 68-76aa were expressed and identified by Western blot. The result indicated that the core sequence recognized by the mAb 1F10 was 68PGKSFWCR76 (Fig. 3).

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Figure 3. The truncated GP3 fragments (A) and the pursue absence GP3-63-77aa fragments (B) were identified by Western blot with the anti-GST mAb, the mAb 1F10, and positive sera.

(A) M: protein marker; 1: GST-GP3-1-171aa; 2: GST-GP3-41-100aa; 3: GST-GP3-41-55aa; 4: GST-GP3-56-70aa; 5: GST-GP3-48-62aa; 6: GST-GP3-63-77aa; 7: GST. (B) M: protein marker; 1: GST-GP3-63-76aa; 2: GST-GP3-63-75aa; 3: GST-GP3-63-74aa; 4: GST-GP3-63-73aa; 5: GST-GP3-63-72aa; 6: GST-GP3-63-71aa; 7: GST-GP3-64-77aa; 8: GST-GP3-65-77aa; 9: GST-GP3-66-77aa; 10: GST-GP3-67-77aa; 11: GST-GP3-68-77aa; 12: GST-GP3-69-77aa; 13: GST-GP3-70-77aa; 14: GST-GP3-68-76aa; 15: GST-GP3-69-76aa. The deduced epitope (69-76aa) was vertified not to be a true one, while the motif (68-76aa) was the epitope recognized by the mAb 1F10. But the epitope was not recognized by positive sera. The positive sera 4# and 7# were pig hyperimmune sera with high titer of neutralizing antibodies against HP-PRRSV, which were obtained from pigs immunized by HuN4-F112 once and then inoculated with HP-PRRSV HuN4 virulent strain (HuN4-F5) three times. The positive serum 28# was collected from a pig inoculated with HP-PRRSV HuN4 virulent strain (HuN4-F5) at 14DPI. A pig was immunized with HuN4-F112 and then inoculated with HP-PRRSV HuN4 virulent strain (HuN4-F5) at 21DPI, the positive serum 71# was collected from the pig after 3 weeks.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.g003

Sequence alignments of the two epitopes of different PRRSV strains

An alignment of the amino acid sequences of the different PRRSV isolates revealed that the epitope on protein N (amino acids 7–33) was relatively conserved among the HP-PRRSV strains, but differed at one amino acid between HuN4-F112 (K11) and HuN4-F5 (R11) (Fig. 2). We then expressed the mutated (R11) N protein, which did not alter the response between the mutated N protein and the mAb 3D7 (data described in 3.2). The result also suggest that the failure of the mAb 3D7 to combine with the HP-PRRSV N protein was unrelated to its amino acid differences. Another alignment revealed that the epitope on protein GP3 (68-76aa) was highly conserved among the HP-PRRSV strains, but have two amino acid differences within the epitope among the classical strains. However, there was four amino acids varied between the HP-PRRSV strains and European-type strains (Fig. 4).

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Figure 4. Multiple sequence alignments of the epitopes of the N and GP3 proteins of HP-PRRSV, classical PRRSV isolates, and vaccine strains.

The amino acid sequences of the epitopes identified are underlined. The strains in square frame are sequenced in our laboratory. Strigulas (red square frame) stands in for the amino acids deleted from the North American PRRSV relative to the sequence of European virus. The amino acid sequences are aligned using the DNAstar MegAlign software.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.g004

Identification of the different passages of HP-PRRSV by the mAb 3D7

HP-PRRSV strains HLJMZ-F2 and HuN4-F5 were passaged about 10 times in Marc-145 cells. IFA was used to determine at which passage of the two HP-PRRSV strains their N protein were recognized by the mAb 3D7. mAb 3D7 did not recognize HuN4-F5, but did recognize HuN4-F9 and HuN4-F17 (Fig. 5). Interestingly, these three passages did not contain the amino acid mutation observed in the N protein [16]. Therefore, although the mAb combined with the same epitope, a different antibody response was induced. The other HP-PRRSV strain, HLJMZ-F2, was recognized by the mAb even after a single passage (Fig. 5). Under conditions similar to those used to assay HuN4, the ORF7 genes were not sequenced, but we assumed that the passages of HLJMZ also contained no amino acid mutation in the N protein. Therefore, we concluded that the antigenicity of HP-PRRSV N protein passaged in Marc-145 cells changed rapidly, but in a way that was unrelated to the amino acid sequences of its N protein.

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Figure 5. Reactivity of the mAb 3D7 (B) with two HP-PRRSV strains at different passages.

The mAb 3D7 reacted with HuN4-F9/F17 and HLJMZ-F3/F4 passages. The mAb 3F7 (A) was used as a positive control.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111633.g005

GP3 epitope’s reactivity with PRRSV-positive serum

To determine whether pigs infected with PRRSV produced antibodies against the epitope (68PGKSFWCR76), the fusion polypeptide identified above was analyzed by Western blot using PRRSV positive sera of HP-PRRSV. Western blot analysis demonstrated that the anti-sera did not recognize the epitope, indicating that the epitope was not an antigenic epitope in the HP-PRRSV-infected pigs.

Discussion

In May 2006, a highly pathogenic PRRS, characterized by high fever and a high proportion of deaths in pigs of all ages, emerged in some swine farms in Jiangxi Province. After the initial outbreak, the disease spread rapidly to most provinces in China, resulting more than one million deaths [11], [13]. Because the effectiveness of the live attenuated North-American-type PRRSV vaccines currently in use was limited against HP-PRRSV infections, a live attenuated vaccine derived from the HP-PRRSV HuN4 strain was developed and approved in China. Further study showed that a few discontinuous amino acid mutations existed between HuN4-F112 and its virulent strain (HuN4-F5) [16], whereas its biological characteristics had changed greatly, especially its virulence. Are these amino acid mutations sufficient to alter the virus from a highly pathogenic strain to a nonvirulent strain? We inferred that changes in the antigenicity of the virus must occur during its passage in Marc-145 cells. mAbs are an important tool for identifying the antigenicity of PRRSV and were also used to identify the antigenic differences between HuN4-F112 and HuN4-F5 in this study.

In the present study, two mAbs, 3D7 and 1F10, against the protein of the HP-PRRS vaccine, were prepared from the native virus immunized mice. BALB/c mice were immunized with the virus to stimulate antibody production in vivo, to produce the mAbs more similar to porcine serum antibodies. These mAbs were readily blocked by positive serum against PRRSV. The mAb 3D7 recognized the HP-PRRS vaccines, but not HP-PRRSV strains. Epitope mapping indicated that mAb 3D7 recognized the long epitope (amino acids 7–33). The N protein was truncated many times, resulting in several fragments of 10–24 amino acids, but no fragment was recognized by the mAb 3D7 (data not shown). Therefore, we inferred that the epitope may have been truncated, or that the epitope may be discontinuous. Sequence alignment suggested that the N protein epitope is conserved among the HP-PRRSV and vaccine strains, except at a single amino acid position at residue 11. A previous study identified five domains with antigenic importance in a reference North-American-type strain, localized at amino acids 30–52, 37–52, 52–69, 69–112, and 112–123 [20], [21]. The N-protein epitope (amino acids 7–33) was first identified in this study, confirming that the N protein is highly immunogenic. In the meantime, we found that when HP-PRRSV isolates HuN4 and HLJMZ were passaged in Marc-145 cells, the mAb 3D7 reacted with the higher passages virus not lower passages virus. Maybe the viral protein had changed, but not in its amino acid sequence. These changes may involve protein modifications, changes in the interaction between the viral protein and host proteins, or even between different viral proteins. The cause of this different response to the mAb requires further study. These results demonstrate that the mAb can be used to distinguish HP-PRRSV strains from attenuated PRRSV strains. GP3 is highly antigenic [30][32]. Using a phage display library, two epitopes spanning aa regions 60–85 and 243–250 of a EU GP3 protein were identified [33]. Two other GP3 epitopes of an NA strain were found and located at aa 74–85 and 67–74 [34]. In the current study, we have expressed a series of peptides from HuN4-F112 GP3 protein and identified by Western blot. According to the results, deduced motif of the epitope (GP3 69-76aa) was expressed. Our data confirmed that GP3 69-76aa is not the minimal unit of this epitope, while GP3 68-76aa is actually the epitope because of the reactivity with the mAb 1F10. However the epitope was not recognized by PRRSV-positive sera of swine. Maybe mAbs screened epitopes cannot truly reflect the antigen and the antibody reaction during viral infection [35].

In summary, one mAb directed against the PRRSV N protein was developed, which recognized one long epitope (amino acids 7–33) and can also distinguish HP-PRRSV from commercial vaccines. A sequence analysis revealed that the failure of the mAb to recognize the virulent strain (HuN4-F5) was unrelated to the amino acid sequences of its epitope. And we also identified a conserved B-cell epitope precisely on PRRSV GP3 protein. These results should extend our understanding of the antigenic structure of the N protein and antigen-antibody reaction in different species of the GP3 protein.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to Dr. Hua-ji Qiu and Dr. Chang-jiang Weng for critical discussions of this study.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: QW JMP HCY ZJT. Performed the experiments: QW JMP. Analyzed the data: QW JMP TQA. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: YS JZC CLL LL HYZ XG XNG. Contributed to the writing of the manuscript: QW JMP HCY ZJT.

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