Mechanisms of typhoid toxin neutralization by antibodies targeting glycan receptor binding and nuclease subunits

Nearly all clinical isolates of Salmonella Typhi, the cause of typhoid fever, are antibiotic resistant. All S. Typhi isolates secrete an A2B5 exotoxin called typhoid toxin to benefit the pathogen during infection. Here, we demonstrate that antibiotic-resistant S. Typhi secretes typhoid toxin continu...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2021-05, Vol.24 (5), p.102454-102454, Article 102454
Hauptverfasser: Ahn, Changhwan, Yang, Yi-An, Neupane, Durga P., Nguyen, Tri, Richards, Angelene F., Sim, Ji Hyun, Mantis, Nicholas J., Song, Jeongmin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Nearly all clinical isolates of Salmonella Typhi, the cause of typhoid fever, are antibiotic resistant. All S. Typhi isolates secrete an A2B5 exotoxin called typhoid toxin to benefit the pathogen during infection. Here, we demonstrate that antibiotic-resistant S. Typhi secretes typhoid toxin continuously during infection regardless of antibiotic treatment. We characterize typhoid toxin antibodies targeting glycan-receptor-binding PltB or nuclease CdtB, which neutralize typhoid toxin in vitro and in vivo, as demonstrated by using typhoid toxin secreted by antibiotic-resistant S. Typhi during human cell infection and lethal dose typhoid toxin challenge to mice. TyTx11 generated in this study neutralizes typhoid toxin effectively, comparable to TyTx4 that binds to all PltB subunits available per holotoxin. Cryoelectron microscopy explains that the binding of TyTx11 to CdtB makes this subunit inactive through CdtB catalytic-site conformational change. The identified toxin-neutralizing epitopes are conserved across all S. Typhi clinical isolates, offering critical insights into typhoid toxin-neutralizing strategies. [Display omitted] •Antibiotic-resistant S. Typhi secretes typhoid toxin despite antibiotic treatment•MAb targeting the receptor-binding or nuclease subunits neutralizes typhoid toxin•TyTx11 makes nuclease CdtB inactive by causing catalytic-site conformational change•Toxin-neutralizing epitopes identified are conserved across S. Typhi clinical isolates
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2021.102454