Variation in antigen-antibody affinity among serotypes of Salmonella O4 serogroup, determined using specific antisera

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Abstract

Serotyping is widely used for typing Salmonella during surveillance, and depends on determining the lipopolysaccharide (LPS) O-antigen and the flagellar protein (H-antigens) components. As the O-antigen is highly variable, and structurally unique to each serotype, we investigated the binding affinities of LPS from Salmonella serotypes of O4 serogroup with specific anti-antigen serum via immunoblot and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Since the serotypes from O4 serogroup also express the O-antigen factor 12, O12 antiserum was also used for the analysis. LPS from the different serotypes showed different binding affinities with the antisera. Therefore, based on the antigen-antibody affinity, a modified agglutination assay was carried out by using O4 and O12 antisera. Although serotypes from O4 serogroup have the common O-antigen factors 4 and 12, the analysis showed that the degree of agglutination reaction is different for each of the serotypes. We suggest that Salmonella serogroup O4 serotypes exhibit different binding affinities with specific antisera despite the presence of common O-antigen factors 4 and 12.

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Aribam, S. D., Elsheimer-Matulova, M., Matsui, H., Hirota, J., Shiraiwa, K., Ogawa, Y., … Eguchi, M. (2015). Variation in antigen-antibody affinity among serotypes of Salmonella O4 serogroup, determined using specific antisera. FEMS Microbiology Letters, 362(21). https://doi.org/10.1093/femsle/fnv168

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