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A double-strain TM (gp45) polypeptide antigen and its application in the serodiagnosis of equine infectious anemia.

Lentiviruses, including equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV), are considered viral quasispecies because of their intrinsic genetic, structural and phenotypic variability. Immunoenzymatic tests (ELISA) for EIAV reported in the literature were obtained mainly by using the capsid protein p26, which is derived almost exclusively from a single strain (Wyoming), and do not reflect the great potential epitopic variability of the EIAV quasispecies. In this investigation, the GenBank database was exploited in a systematic approach to design a set of representative protein antigens useful for EIAV serodiagnosis. The main bioinformatic tools used were clustering, molecular modelling, epitope predictions and aggregative/ solubility predictions. This approach led to the design of two antigenic proteins, i.e. a full sequence p26 capsid protein and a doublestrain polypeptide derived from the gp45 transmembrane protein fused to Maltose Binding Protein (MBP) that were expressed by recombinant DNA technology starting from synthetic genes, and analyzed by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. Both proteins were used in an indirect ELISA test that can address some of the high variability of EIAV. The novel addition of the gp45 double-strain antigen contributed to enhance the diagnostic sensitivity and could be also useful for immunoblotting application.

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