3.9 Article

Synthetic Long Peptide Derived from Mycobacterium tuberculosis Latency Antigen Rv1733c Protects against Tuberculosis

Journal

CLINICAL AND VACCINE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 9, Pages 1060-1069

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/CVI.00271-15

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Grand Challenges in Global Health (GC6) [74]
  2. Top Institute Pharma [D-101-1]
  3. European Commission EC FP7 NEWTBVAC [HEALTH.F3.2009 241745]
  4. EC FP7 ADITEC [HEALTH.2011.1.4-4 280873]
  5. EC ITN FP7 VACTRAIN [316655]
  6. EC HORIZON2020 TBVAC2020 [643381]
  7. EC FP7 EURIPRED [FP7-INFRA-2012-312661]

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Responsible for 9 million new cases of active disease and nearly 2 million deaths each year, tuberculosis (TB) remains a global health threat of overwhelming dimensions. Mycobacterium bovis BCG, the only licensed vaccine available, fails to confer lifelong protection and to prevent reactivation of latent infection. Although 15 new vaccine candidates are now in clinical trials, an effective vaccine against TB remains elusive, and new strategies for vaccination are vital. BCG vaccination fails to induce immunity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis latency antigens. Synthetic long peptides (SLPs) combined with adjuvants have been studied mostly for therapeutic cancer vaccines, yet not for TB, and proved to induce efficient antitumor immunity. This study investigated an SLP derived from Rv1733c, a major M. tuberculosis latency antigen which is highly expressed by dormant M. tuberculosis and well recognized by T cells from latently M. tuberculosis-infected individuals. In order to assess its in vivo immunogenicity and protective capacity, Rv1733c SLP in CpG was administered to HLA-DR3 transgenic mice. Immunization with Rv1733c SLP elicited gamma interferon-positive/tumor necrosis factor-positive (IFN-(gamma+)/TNF+) and IFN-gamma(+) CD4(+) T cells and Rv1733c-specific antibodies and led to a significant reduction in the bacterial load in the lungs of M. tuberculosis-challenged mice. This was observed both in a pre- and in a post-M. tuberculosis challenge setting. Moreover, Rv1733c SLP immunization significantly boosted the protective efficacy of BCG, demonstrating the potential of M. tuberculosis latency antigens to improve BCG efficacy. These data suggest a promising role for M. tuberculosis latency antigen Rv1733c-derived SLPs as a novel TB vaccine approach, both in a prophylactic and in a postinfection setting.

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