4.7 Article

Targeting Secreted Protease/Anti-Protease Balance as a Vaccine Strategy against the Helminth Fasciola hepatica

Journal

VACCINES
Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/vaccines10020155

Keywords

Fasciola hepatica; sheep; vaccines; protease-anti-protease balance; stefin; Kunitz-type inhibitor

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This study reports a vaccine strategy targeting the parasite's protease/anti-protease balance. A vaccine cocktail containing three recombinant stefins and a Kunitz-type inhibitor was evaluated in two sheep trials. Although fluke burden was not reduced, the vaccinated animals showed significantly greater weight gain and a significant reduction in egg viability. Multivariate regression analysis indicated that vaccination and increased levels of antibodies specific for the parasite's peptidase inhibitors were positive indicators for increased weight gain and normal levels of hemoglobin.
The liver fluke Fasciola hepatica is an economically important global pathogen of humans and their livestock. To facilitate host invasion and migration, F. hepatica secretes an abundance of cathepsin peptidases but prevents excessive damage to both parasite and host tissues by co-secreting regulatory peptidase inhibitors, cystatins/stefins and Kunitz-type inhibitors. Here, we report a vaccine strategy aimed at disrupting the parasite's protease/anti-protease balance by targeting these key inhibitors. Our vaccine cocktail containing three recombinant stefins (rFhStf-1, rFhStf-2, rFhStf-3) and a Kunitz-type inhibitor (rFhKT1) formulated in adjuvant Montanide 61VG was assessed in two independent sheep trials. While fluke burden was not reduced in either trial, in Trial 1 the vaccinated animals showed significantly greater weight gain (p < 0.05) relative to the non-vaccinated control group. In both trials we observed a significant reduction in egg viability (36-42%). Multivariate regression analyses showed vaccination and increased levels of IgG2 antibodies specific for the F. hepatica peptidase inhibitors were positive indicators for increased weight gain and levels of haemoglobin within the normal range at 16 weeks post-infection (wpi; p < 0.05). These studies point to the potential of targeting peptidase inhibitors as vaccine cocktails for fasciolosis control in sheep.

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