• Title of article

    Development of an operational synaptobrevin-based fluorescent substrate for tetanus neurotoxin quantification

  • Author/Authors

    Perpetuo، Elen A. نويسنده , , Juliano، Luis نويسنده , , Prado، Sally M. نويسنده , , Fratelli، Fernando نويسنده , , Fernandes، Irene نويسنده , , Lebrun، Ivo نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
  • Pages
    -154
  • From page
    155
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Tetanus neurotoxin (TTx), produced by Clostridium tetani, is a two-chain polypeptide with a heavy molecular chain (HC; 100 kDa) and a light molecular chain (LC; 50 kDa) linked by a disulphide bridge. The low-molecular-mass chain is classified as a zinc metalloprotease (EC 3.4.24.68) with specific hydrolysis on synaptobrevin. With the known enzymic activity for the LC of TTx, we developed a quantification method using a quenched fluorescence peptide substrate based on the synaptobrevin sequence (fragments 73-82), suitable for direct determination of the whole TTx (HC+LC) even in crude production batches, without the necessity of purification and reduction steps to isolate the LC of TTx. The rate of substrate hydrolysis was 200 nmol/min and it was totally inhibited by EDTA, antirecombinant fragment C antibody, and the cleavage was in a single bond (Gln-Phe) with purified and crude TTx. Besides, ELISA applied to the anti-TTx serum produced at our Institute showed cross-reaction with every fraction of the crude TTx extract. Another aspect is that TTx activity depends on the storage time, reaching a maximum on day 10. The results obtained suggest that the use of the new fluorescent substrate, Abz-synaptobrevin73-82-EDDnp, enables easy and quick determination of TTx. It is a good alternative to some of the existing methods such as flocculation assay, and it can replace, under some conditions, the biological assays (minimal mortal dose).
  • Journal title
    BIOTECHNOLOGY AND APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY
  • Serial Year
    2002
  • Journal title
    BIOTECHNOLOGY AND APPLIED BIOCHEMISTRY
  • Record number

    52527