scholarly journals Yersinia pestis IS1541 Transposition Provides for Escape from Plague Immunity

2009 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 1807-1816 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claire A. Cornelius ◽  
Lauriane E. Quenee ◽  
Derek Elli ◽  
Nancy A. Ciletti ◽  
Olaf Schneewind

ABSTRACTYersinia pestisis perhaps the most feared infectious agent due to its ability to cause epidemic outbreaks of plague disease in animals and humans with high mortality. Plague infections elicit strong humoral immune responses against the capsular antigen (fraction 1 [F1]) ofY. pestis, and F1-specific antibodies provide protective immunity. Here we asked whetherY. pestisgenerates mutations that enable bacterial escape from protective immunity and isolated a variant with an IS1541insertion incaf1Aencoding the F1 outer membrane usher. Thecaf1A::IS1541insertion prevented assembly of F1 pili and provided escape from plague immunity via F1-specific antibodies without a reduction in virulence in mouse models of bubonic or pneumonic plague. F1-specific antibodies interfere withY. pestistype III transport of effector proteins into host cells, an inhibitory effect that was overcome by thecaf1A::IS1541insertion. These findings suggest a model in which IS1541insertion intocaf1Aprovides for reversible changes in envelope structure, enablingY. pestisto escape from adaptive immune responses and plague immunity.

2008 ◽  
Vol 76 (5) ◽  
pp. 2025-2036 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauriane E. Quenee ◽  
Claire A. Cornelius ◽  
Nancy A. Ciletti ◽  
Derek Elli ◽  
Olaf Schneewind

ABSTRACT Yersinia pestis, the highly virulent agent of plague, is a biological weapon. Strategies that prevent plague have been sought for centuries, and immunization with live, attenuated (nonpigmented) strains or subunit vaccines with F1 (Caf1) antigen is considered effective. We show here that immunization with live, attenuated strains generates plague-protective immunity and humoral immune responses against F1 pilus antigen and LcrV. Y. pestis variants lacking caf1 (F1 pili) are not only fully virulent in animal models of bubonic and pneumonic plague but also break through immune responses generated with live, attenuated strains or F1 subunit vaccines. In contrast, immunization with purified LcrV, a protein at the tip of type III needles, generates protective immunity against the wild-type and the fully virulent caf1 mutant strain, in agreement with the notion that LcrV can elicit vaccine protection against both types of virulent plague strains.


2013 ◽  
Vol 81 (12) ◽  
pp. 4626-4634 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ediane B. Silva ◽  
Andrew Goodyear ◽  
Marjorie D. Sutherland ◽  
Nicole L. Podnecky ◽  
Mercedes Gonzalez-Juarrero ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTInfections with the Gram-negative bacteriumBurkholderia pseudomallei(melioidosis) are associated with high mortality, and there is currently no approved vaccine to prevent the development of melioidosis in humans. Infected patients also do not develop protective immunity to reinfection, and some individuals will develop chronic, subclinical infections withB. pseudomallei. At present, our understanding of what constitutes effective protective immunity againstB. pseudomalleiinfection remains incomplete. Therefore, we conducted a study to elucidate immune correlates of vaccine-induced protective immunity against acuteB. pseudomalleiinfection. BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice were immunized subcutaneously with a highly attenuated, Select Agent-excludedpurMdeletion mutant ofB. pseudomallei(strain Bp82) and then subjected to intranasal challenge with virulentB. pseudomalleistrain 1026b. Immunization with Bp82 generated significant protection from challenge withB. pseudomallei, and protection was associated with a significant reduction in bacterial burden in lungs, liver, and spleen of immunized mice. Humoral immunity was critically important for vaccine-induced protection, as mice lacking B cells were not protected by immunization and serum from Bp82-vaccinated mice could transfer partial protection to nonvaccinated animals. In contrast, vaccine-induced protective immunity was found to be independent of both CD4 and CD8 T cells. Tracking studies demonstrated uptake of the Bp82 vaccine strain predominately by neutrophils in vaccine-draining lymph nodes and by smaller numbers of dendritic cells (DC) and monocytes. We concluded that protection following cutaneous immunization with a live attenuatedBurkholderiavaccine strain was dependent primarily on generation of effective humoral immune responses.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 5192-5192
Author(s):  
Junko Jimbo ◽  
Kazuya Sato ◽  
Takaaki Hosoki ◽  
Motohiro Shindo ◽  
Katsuya Ikuta ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Tumor-derived heat shock proteins (HSPs), which bind the tumor specific antigenic peptides and carry them onto MHC molecules, are used for the vaccination against cancers. We previously reported that immunotherapy using leukemia cell-derived HSPs against minimal residual leukemia in mice prolonged survival by leukemia-specific CD8 + cytotoxic T lymphocyte induction. In addition, we showed that CD4+ as well as CD8+ T cell is indispensable for survival prolongation (Sato et al. Blood, 2001), which suggests that humoral immune response by CD4+ T cell is also important to eradicate leukemia cells. Contributions of humoral immune responses in anti-leukemia immunity induced by HSP-based immunotherapy remain unknown and are important information to induce effective anti-leukemia immunity. In this study, we investigated the humoral immune responses and cytotoxic activities against leukemia cells in the leukemia cell-derived HSP70 immunization mice model in vitro. Methods: Balb/c mice and syngeneic A20 B-cell leukemia cell line were used in this study. HSP70 was purified from A20 cells or healthy mice liver tissue. After subcutaneous administration of A20-derived HSP70 (A20-HSP), liver-derived HSP70 (liver-HSP) to the healthy mice, the sera were harvested to perform following experiments. To detect anti-A20 antibodies, mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of A20 cells with mice sera and FITC-conjugated anti-mouse-IgG was analyzed by flowcytometry. The sera were subjected to ELISA to detect the specific IgG against A20-HSP, or IgG secreted by A20 cells (A20 Ig) as putative A20-specific antigen. Complement dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) activities were determined by trypan blue uptake of mouse target cells (A20, YAC1: lymphoma, or T27A: myeloid leukemia) after incubation with mice sera and rabbit complement. Results: MIF of A20 with the sera from A20-HSP immunized mice (A20-HSP mice) was significantly higher than that from liver-HSP immunized mice (liver-HSP mice). IgG level against A20-HSP by ELISA was significantly increased in the A20-HSP mice compared with liver-HSP mice. The reactivities of A20-HSP mice sera against A20-HSP were completely lost by ATP treatment, which treatment dissociates the antigenic peptide from A20-HSP. In addition, IgG level against A20 Ig in the A20-HSP mice was significantly higher than that in the liver-HSP mice, and this reactivity against A20 Ig were inhibited by preincubation of sera with A20 Ig-idiotipe-derived peptide (A20 IP) DYWGQGTEL, which is known as the A20-specific peptide. The sera from A20-HSP mice showed no cytotoxic activity itself but showed significantly high CDC activity with complement against A20 but not to YAC-1 or T27A in vitro. Conclusions: Immunization with leukemia cell-derived HSP70 induces the leukemia specific antibodies against peptides bound with leukemia cell-derived HSP70, including an idiotipic peptide of IgG secreted by leukemia cells. In addition, CDC by these leukemia specific antibodies is though to be one of the mechanisms of anti-leukemia immunity induced by leukemia cell-derived HSP70 immunization. These findings enable the effective monitoring of therapeutic effects on the HSP-based immunotherapy for patients with leukemia by using the leukemia specific antibodies, and might develop a new strategy to enhance the leukemia specific CDC activities induced by HSP70-immunization.


2007 ◽  
Vol 56 (7) ◽  
pp. 888-895 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Ling Yu ◽  
Hanhong Dan ◽  
Min Lin

The role of the humoral immune response in protective immunity against listerial infection has been overlooked and is essentially unknown. This study aimed to discover the protein targets of Listeria monocytogenes that elicit an antibody response following infection in a rabbit model. A genomic expression library for L. monocytogenes was constructed and differentially screened to identify genes encoding proteins that reacted with antiserum from rabbits infected with live L. monocytogenes serotype 4b (RαL), but not with that from animals immunized with heat-killed bacteria (RαK). Thirty-one clones expressing proteins that reacted exclusively with RαL were identified and sequenced. Sequence analysis, together with Western blot analysis of the proteins expressed from positive clones, led to the identification of eight L. monocytogenes proteins as targets of humoral immune responses during listerial infection: three internalin members (InlA, InlD and InlC2) and five novel proteins of unknown function (designated IspA, IspB, IspC, IspD and IspE, respectively). Exhibition of humoral immune responses to these proteins in actively infected rabbits but not in animals receiving heat-killed L. monocytogenes suggested that they were induced or significantly upregulated in vivo during infection and thus are important in Listeria pathogenesis. With the exception of antibodies to InlA, this is the first demonstration of antibodies to the other seven proteins in infected hosts. These immunogenic proteins may be useful candidates for elucidation of the role of antibodies in protective immunity in the context of listerial infection, as well as potential targets for serodiagnostic reagents and vaccine and drug development.


2007 ◽  
Vol 73 (11) ◽  
pp. 3765-3767 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stuart W. Naylor ◽  
Allen Flockhart ◽  
Pablo Nart ◽  
David G. E. Smith ◽  
John Huntley ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 has a natural reservoir in the intestinal tracts of cattle. Colonization is asymptomatic and transient, but it is not clear if protective immunity is induced. This study demonstrates that prior colonization induces humoral immune responses to bacterial antigens and reduces bacterial shedding after experimental challenge with the homologous strain.


2010 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 853-861 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Hamsten ◽  
Georgina Tjipura-Zaire ◽  
Laura McAuliffe ◽  
Otto J. B. Huebschle ◽  
Massimo Scacchia ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Specific humoral immune responses in a clinical trial on cattle for vaccines against contagious bovine pleuropneumonia (CBPP) were investigated. The trial included a subunit vaccine consisting of five recombinant putative variable surface proteins of the infectious agent Mycoplasma mycoides subsp. mycoides small colony type (M. mycoides SC) compared to the currently approved attenuated vaccine strain T1/44 and untreated controls. Humoral immune responses to 65 individual recombinant surface proteins of M. mycoides SC were monitored by a recently developed bead-based array assay. Responses to the subunit vaccine components were found to be weak. Animals vaccinated with this vaccine were not protected and had CBPP lesions similar to those of the untreated controls. In correlating protein-specific humoral responses to T1/44-induced immunity, five proteins associated with a protective immune response were identified by statistical evaluation, namely, MSC_1046 (LppQ), MSC_0271, MSC_0136, MSC_0079, and MSC_0431. These five proteins may be important candidates in the development of a novel subunit vaccine against CBPP.


2008 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 505-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riny Janssen ◽  
Karen A. Krogfelt ◽  
Shaun A. Cawthraw ◽  
Wilfrid van Pelt ◽  
Jaap A. Wagenaar ◽  
...  

SUMMARY Campylobacter is a major cause of acute bacterial diarrhea in humans worldwide. This study was aimed at summarizing the current understanding of host mechanisms involved in the defense against Campylobacter by evaluating data available from three sources: (i) epidemiological observations, (ii) observations of patients, and (iii) experimental observations including observations of animal models and human volunteer studies. Analysis of available data clearly indicates that an effective immune system is crucial for the host defense against Campylobacter infection. Innate, cell-mediated, and humoral immune responses are induced during Campylobacter infection, but the relative importance of these mechanisms in conferring protective immunity against reinfection is unclear. Frequent exposure to Campylobacter does lead to the induction of short-term protection against disease but most probably not against colonization. Recent progress in the development of more suitable animal models for studying Campylobacter infection has opened up possibilities to study the importance of innate and adaptive immunity during infection and in protection against reinfection. In addition, advances in genomics and proteomics technologies will enable more detailed molecular studies. Such studies combined with better integration of host and pathogen research driven by epidemiological findings may truly advance our understanding of Campylobacter infection in humans.


1998 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
pp. 3510-3518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie L. James ◽  
Allen W. Cheever ◽  
Patricia Caspar ◽  
Thomas A. Wynn

ABSTRACT High levels of nitric oxide (NO) are produced by inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) in response to activating signals from Th1-associated cytokines and play an important role in cytotoxicity and cytostasis against many pathogenic microorganisms. In addition to its direct effector function, NO serves as a potent immunoregulatory factor. NO produced by gamma interferon-activated macrophages immobilizes and kills Schistosoma mansoni larvae, and several studies have indicated a role for this pathway in protective immunity against this parasite. The potential regulatory influence of NO in immunity to S. mansoni is less well understood. In this study, we have used iNOS-deficient mice to determine the role of NO in mice vaccinated with irradiated cercariae of S. mansoni. We show by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and reverse transcriptase PCR analysis that vaccinated iNOS-deficient mice develop exacerbated type 1 cytokine responses in the lungs, the site where resistance to infection is primarily manifested. In addition, parasite-specific immunoglobulin G2a (IgG2a) and IgG2b antibody responses were significantly increased in vaccinated iNOS-deficient animals and total IgE antibody levels in serum were decreased relative to those in wild-type controls. Surprisingly, since resistance in this vaccine model is largely Th1 dependent and since Th1-related cellular and humoral immune responses were found to be exacerbated in vaccinated iNOS-deficient mice, vaccine-elicited protective immunity against challenge infection was found to be reduced. These findings demonstrate that iNOS plays a paradoxical role in immunity to S. mansoni, both in the effector mechanism of resistance and in the down regulation of the type 1 cytokine response, which is ultimately required for NO production.


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