4.5 Article

Cellular and humoral immunity are synergistic in protection against types A and B Francisella tularensis

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 597-605

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2008.10.079

Keywords

Francisella tularensis; Combination vaccination; Protective immunity

Funding

  1. New England Regional Center of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases [AI057157, AI48474]

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Herein we report studies with a novel combination vaccine that, when administered to mice, conferred protection against highly virulent strains of Francisella tularensis by stimulating both arms of the immune system. Our earlier studies with Ft.LVS::wbtA, an O-polysaccharide (OPS)-negative mutant derived from the available live vaccine strain of F tularensis (Ft.LVS), elucidated the role of antibodies to the OPS - a key virulence determinant - in protection against virulent type A organisms. However. when expressed on the organism, the OPS enhances virulence. In contrast, in purified form, the OPS is completely benign. We hypothesized that a novel combination vaccine containing both a component that induces humoral immunity and a component that induces cellular immunity to this intracellular microbe would have an enhanced protective capacity over either component alone and would be much safer than the LVS vaccine. Thus we developed a combination vaccine containing both OPS (supplied in an OPS-tetanus toxoid glycoconjugate) to induce a humoral antibody response and strain Ft.LVS::wbtA (which is markedly attenuated by its lack of OPS) to induce a cell-mediated protective response. This vaccine protected mice against otherwise-lethal intranasal and intradermal challenge with wild-type F tularensis strains Schu S4 (type A) and FSC 108 (type 13). These results represent a significant advance in our understanding of immunity to F. tularensis and provide important insight into the development of a safer vaccine effective against infections caused by clinical type A and B strains of F. tularensis. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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