Abstract:
There is an imperative need for effective control of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) on a global scale and vaccination of
cattle may prove to be pivotal in achieving this. The oral and parenteral use of a heat-inactivated Mycobacterium
bovis (M. bovis) vaccine has previously been found to confer partial protection against BTB in several species. A role
for complement factor C3 has been suggested in wild boar, but the exact mechanism by which this vaccine provides
protection remains unclear. In the present study, a quantitative proteomics approach was used to analyze the
white blood cell proteome of vaccinated cattle in comparison to unvaccinated controls, prior (T0) and in response
to vaccination, skin test and challenge (T9 and T12). The Fisher’s exact test was used to compare the proportion of
positive reactors to standard immunological assays for BTB (the BOVIGAM® assay, IDEXX TB ELISA and skin test)
between the vaccinated and control groups. Using reverse-phase liquid-chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
(RP-LC-MS/MS), a total of 12,346 proteins were identified with at least two peptides per protein and the
Chi2-test (P=0.05) determined 1,222 to be differentially represented at the key time point comparisons. Gene
ontology (GO) analysis was performed in order to determine the biological processes (BPs), molecular functions
(MFs) and cell components (CCs) the proteins formed part of. The analysis was focused on immune system BPs,
specifically. GO analysis revealed that the most overrepresented proteins in immune system BPs, were kinase
activity and receptor activity molecular functions and extracellular, Golgi apparatus and endosome cell components
and included complement factor C8α and C8β as well as toll-like receptors 4 (TLR4) and 9 (TLR9). Proteins
of the Janus kinase (JAK)-signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) (JAK-STAT) and protein kinase C
(PKC) signaling pathways were furthermore found to potentially be involved in the immune response elicited by
the inactivated vaccine. In conclusion, this study provides a first indication of the role of several immune system
pathways in response to the heat-inactivated M. bovis vaccine and mycobacterial challenge.
Description:
Supplementary Figure S1. GO analysis of differentially represented proteins. Number of counts of over- and under-represented proteins grouped by (A) BP, (B) MF and (C) CC. Protein differential representation is shown in latest time when compared to earliest time for the same group, or in vaccinated cattle when compared to control animals.