Antigens and toxins

ANTIGENS AND TOXINS

C.botulinum possesses a number of H, O and spore antigens

  • Eight types of C.botulinum have been identified (Types A to G) based on the immunological difference in the toxins produced by them.
  • These neurotoxins are identical in pharmacological action but differ in potency, distribution and antigenicity.
  • They are neutralized only by the homologus antiserum.
Type
Toxin produced
Most susceptible animals
Sources of toxin
Disease
A
A
Humans, chickens, pigs
Vegetables, fruits, meat and fish
Food borne botulism
C1
Waterfowl
Invertebrate carcases, rotting vegetation and material on refuse dumps
Limberneck in long necked birds
C2
Cattle, horses, mink, dogs
Carcases, baled silage, chicken manure as feed supplement
Forage poisoning
D
D
Cattle, sheep
Eating contaminated bones and carcases of small mammals
(Phosphorus deficiency-Pica)
Lamsiekte
  • The toxins differ from other exotoxins in that it is not released during the life of the organism.
  • It is appears in the medium only on the death and autolysis of the cell.
  • It is believed to be synthesized initially as a nontoxic protoxin or progenitor toxin.
  • Trypsin and other enzymes activate progenitor toxin to active toxin.
  • The toxin is heat labile and its mol.wt. is 70,000.
  • One mg of neurotoxins contains more than 120 million mouse lethal doses.
  • The lethal dose for human is 1-2μg. This toxin acts slowly taking several hours to kill.

Comparison of the toxins of C.tetani and C.botulinum

 
C.tetani
C.botulinum
Site of toxin production
Wounds
Carcases, decaying vegetation and occasionally wounds and intestine
Mode of action
Centrally by blocking synaptic inhibition
Peripherally by blocking neuromuscular transmission
Type of paralysis
Spastic paralysis
Flaccid paralysis
Antigenic types of toxin
Tetanospasmin (one antigenic type)
Eight different toxins produced by types A-G

 

Last modified: Monday, 4 June 2012, 4:26 AM