Antigenic Homology of the Inducible Ferric Citrate Receptor (FecA) of Coliform Bacteria Isolated from Herds with Naturally Occurring Bovine Intramammary Infections
1999
Expression of ferric citrate receptor FecA by Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae isolated from bovine mastitis was investigated. Transformant E. coli UT5600/pSV66, which produces large quantities of FecA in the presence of citrate, was constructed. The FecA of E. coli UT5600/pSV66 was purified by preparative sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and used to prepare polyclonal antiserum in rabbits. All coliform isolates of E. coli ( n = 18) and K. pneumoniae ( n = 17) from naturally occurring bovine intramammary infections in five herds induced iron-regulated outer membrane proteins when grown in Trypticase soy broth containing 200 μM α-α′-dipyridyl and 1 mM citrate. Polyclonal antiserum against FecA was used in conjunction with an immunoblot technique to determine the degree of antigenic homology of FecA among isolates. In the presence of citrate, each isolate expressed FecA that reacted with the anti-FecA polyclonal antiserum. The molecular mass of FecA (∼80.5 kDa) was also highly conserved among isolates. Therefore, the ferric citrate iron transport may be induced in coliform bacteria and utilized to acquire iron in milk for survival and growth. The FecA is an attractive vaccine component for controlling coliform mastitis during the lactation period.
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