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Infection and Immunity, February 2002, p. 661-664, Vol. 70, No. 2
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 70.2.661-664.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Anthrax Spores Make an Essential Contribution to Vaccine Efficacy
Fabien Brossier,1 Martine Levy,1 and Michèle Mock1*
Unité des Toxines et Pathogénie Bactérienne (CNRS URA 2172), Institut Pasteur, 75725 Paris Cedex 15, France1
Received 6 August 2001/
Returned for modification 28 September 2001/
Accepted 9 November 2001

ABSTRACT
Anthrax is caused by
Bacillus anthracis, a gram-positive spore-forming
bacterium. Septicemia and toxemia rapidly lead to death in infected
mammal hosts. Currently used acellular vaccines against anthrax
consist of protective antigen (PA), one of the anthrax toxin
components. However, in experimental animals such vaccines are
less protective than live attenuated strains. Here we demonstrate
that the addition of formaldehyde-inactivated spores (FIS) of
B. anthracis to PA elicits total protection against challenge
with virulent
B. anthracis strains in mice and guinea pigs.
The toxin-neutralizing activities of sera from mice immunized
with PA alone or PA plus FIS were similar, suggesting that the
protection conferred by PA plus FIS was not only a consequence
of the humoral response to PA. A PA-deficient challenge strain
was constructed, and its virulence was due solely to its multiplication.
Immunization with FIS alone was sufficient to protect mice partially,
and guinea pigs totally, against infection with this strain.
This suggests that spore antigens contribute to protection.
Guinea pigs and mice had very different susceptibilities to
infection with the nontoxigenic strain, highlighting the importance
of verifying the pertinence of animal models for evaluating
anthrax vaccines.

INTRODUCTION
The disease anthrax is caused by
Bacillus anthracis, a gram-positive
spore-forming bacterium. It affects mammals including humans.
After entry into the host, the spores germinate and yield toxin-producing,
capsulated bacilli. Toxemia and septicemia rapidly lead to death.
The bacilli secrete three proteins, protective antigen (PA),
lethal factor (LF), and edema factor (EF), and these proteins
combine to form the lethal (PA plus LF) and edema (PA plus EF)
toxins. PA is the common cell binding component and is required
for toxin activity (
14). Two large virulence plasmids, pXO1
and pXO2, encode toxin production and the formation of a poly-

-
D-glutamic
acid capsule, respectively (
20,
30). Curing
B. anthracis wild-type
strains of either plasmid attenuates virulence. However, the
residual virulence of pXO1
- strains appears to be strongly influenced
by the backgrounds of both pXO2 and the chromosome (
32,
35).
A pXO2
+ pXO1
- derivative of the Ames strain, a strain often
described as particularly virulent (
4,
13), has been shown to
be as virulent for mice as the parental strain, due exclusively
to bacterial multiplication and associated septicemia (
35).
Curing
B. anthracis wild-type strains of pXO2 yields toxigenic,
noncapsulated, attenuated strains with vaccinal properties.
One such strain, the Sterne strain, is used in the form of a
live-spore vaccine for the immunization of animals. Although
it performs satisfactorily (
7,
26), it has side effects in some
species. The recent development of a genetically detoxified
Sterne strain derivative, RPLC2, may provide a valuable alternative
to the residual virulence of the Sterne strain (
2). The live
vaccine is not considered suitable for human use, but PA-based
cell-free vaccines, prepared from culture supernatants of the
Sterne strain, have been licensed (
7,
5,
27). Multiple immunizations
are required to confer protection, and there are cases of reactogenicity.
Recombinant PA can now be produced from various heterologous
organisms including
Bacillus subtilis (
11,
17,
34), and the
safety and consistency of PA preparations have been improved.
Highly purified PA preparations and recombinant PA have been
tested in various animal models, including mice, guinea pigs,
rabbits, and monkeys (
4,
10,
33,
36), in combination with various
adjuvants (
9,
12). These studies have yielded varied results.
They also indicate that PA-based vaccines are less protective
than live-spore vaccines against virulent isolates of
B. anthracis (
16,
33). Thus, some strains, for example, the Ames strain,
have been termed "vaccine resistant" because full protection
in guinea pigs immunized with PA is possible only with adjuvants
unsuitable for human vaccines (
4,
12,
16). Moreover, several
studies illustrate the difficulty of evaluating PA vaccines
and establishing a direct correlation between PA-specific antibody
titers and protection (
9,
12,
26,
28,
29).
In recent years, efforts have been made to improve acellular vaccines. There is evidence that spore antigens present in live-spore vaccines make a contribution to protection (3). Immunization with PA targets toxemia but not septicemia, and it is possible that an immune response to spore antigens would enhance protective efficacy by targeting the early steps of infection. We thus tested the efficacy of a vaccine composed of PA and formaldehyde-inactivated spores (FIS) of a genetically detoxified Sterne strain (RPLC2). Virulent B. anthracis strains and two animal models were used: (i) guinea pigs, the animals most commonly used for testing anthrax vaccines (13, 16, 26, 29), and (ii) mice, which are very sensitive to anthrax and particularly difficult to protect (12, 33). Inclusion of FIS in an acellular vaccine resulted in total protection against virulent strains in both animal models, under conditions where PA alone failed. However, the findings for the two animal species differed, indicating the importance of assessing the pertinence of animal models for evaluating anthrax vaccines.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains.
B. anthracis strains were grown in brain heart infusion medium
or on CAP agar plates (
25). Spectinomycin (60 µg/ml) was
added as appropriate. The following
B. anthracis strains were
used: the Sterne strain 7702 (pXO1
+), its derivatives RPLC2
(carrying point mutations affecting the catalytic sites of EF
and LF) (
2) and SM11 (with the genes encoding the S layer deleted)
(
19), and the virulent strains (pXO1
+ pXO2
+) 17JB (
30) and 9602
(a strain isolated in a fatal human case of anthrax in France
[
1]). Spores of
B. anthracis strains were prepared as previously
described (
21). When necessary, spores were inactivated with
formaldehyde (4%) after overnight incubation at 37°C. Spores
were conserved in sterile water at 4°C.
Construction of strain 9602P.
The pagA gene carried by pACP41 (22) was cleaved with NcoI, blunted, and ligated to the nonpolar spectinomycin resistance cassette (Spc-H+1) (18). The inactivated gene was inserted into pAT113, and the construct was transferred into strain 9602 by "heterogramic" mating as previously described (21). The mutant strain carrying the pagA gene deletion (9602P) in place of the wild-type copy was selected on CAP plates containing bicarbonate and spectinomycin. The plates were incubated at 37°C in a 5% CO2 incubator to allow transcription of the spectinomycin resistance cassette from the pagA gene promoter. The construct in 9602P was verified by PCR, and the absence of PA production was checked by immunoblotting using antibodies specific for PA.
Immunization and challenge of experimental animals.
Seven-week-old female Swiss outbred mice (six per group) (Iffa Credo, l'Arbresle, France) and female Hartley guinea pigs weighing 200 to 300 g (Charles River, Saint-Aubin les Elbeuf, France) were used for virulence and immunization experiments. The components used for immunization were purified PA (10 µg/mouse and 40 µg/guinea pig) and/or FIS of RPLC2. Aluminum hydroxide (0.3%), which is the adjuvant licensed for human vaccines (5, 27), was used for all immunizations. Mice were injected subcutaneously (200 µl), and guinea pigs were injected intradermally (100 µl). Animals were immunized twice, on days 0 and 15. Serum samples were taken from the retro-orbital plexus of mice and by cardiac puncture from guinea pigs on day 33. Animals were challenged subcutaneously on day 35. The 50% lethal dose (LD50; the dose of spores killing half the animals) of 17JB was 500 spores for mice; the LD50 of both 9602 and 9602P was 50 spores for mice. The LD50 of 9602 was 100 spores for guinea pigs. Mice were challenged with a dose equivalent to 30 times the LD50 of 17JB, 9602, or 9602P, and guinea pigs were challenged with 300 times the LD50 of 9602. Surviving animals were sacrificed 2 weeks after challenge.
Serological tests.
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) were used to determine titers of antibodies (total immunoglobulin) specific for the purified PA as previously described (23). Titers of antibodies to spore surface proteins were also determined by ELISA. Wells of 96-well microtiter plates (Nunc) were coated with formaldehyde-treated SM11 spores (107/well) overnight at 37°C. Spores were then fixed with paraformaldehyde (3.4%). Anti-species antibodies coupled to peroxidase were used at a dilution of 1/1,000. An arbitrary A492 value of 0.5 was used to calculate the endpoint titers.
Neutralizing assays on macrophages.
Murine macrophages (RAW264.7) were seeded in a 96-well microtiter plate (Nunc) (2 x 104 cells/well) and incubated for 16 h at 37°C under a 5% CO2 atmosphere. PA (50 ng/ml, the 100% effective concentration) was preincubated for 1 h at 37°C under a 5% CO2 atmosphere with dilutions of sera from mice immunized with PA alone or with PA plus FIS. The complexes were then incubated with LF (1 µg/ml) and the macrophages for 3 h at 37°C under a 5% CO2 atmosphere. Cell viability was quantified by a colorimetric assay (8).
Statistics.
The
2 test was used for statistical analysis.

RESULTS
Protective efficacy of PA plus FIS in guinea pigs.
The contribution of FIS to PA vaccine efficacy was first evaluated
in guinea pigs (Table
1).
The highly virulent strain 9602, which
has an LD
50 similar to that of the Ames strain (
13), was used
for challenge. Animals receiving PA alone were poorly protected
(22%), in agreement with the findings of other immunoprotection
studies. In contrast, inclusion of FIS in the vaccine enhanced
protection and did so in a dose-dependent manner. Indeed, protection
was 100% when 10
7 spores or more were included. Immunization
with spores alone, even at the highest dose, provided only partial
protection (25%). The difference in survival between guinea
pigs immunized with PA alone and those immunized with PA plus
10
8 FIS was statistically significant (
P < 0.05). The difference
in survival between guinea pigs immunized with 10
8 FIS alone
and those immunized with PA plus 10
8 FIS was also statistically
significant (
P < 0.02). Thus, the combination PA plus FIS
provided full protection under conditions where PA alone or
FIS alone failed to do so.
Protective efficacy of PA plus FIS in mice.
Two challenge strains, the laboratory strain 17JB and 9602,
were used with mice. Their LD
50s were 500 and 50 spores per
mouse, respectively. Fifty percent and 33% of mice immunized
with preparations of PA or FIS alone, respectively, were protected
against 17JB (Table
2).
In contrast, 100% of those immunized
with the combination PA plus FIS survived the lethal challenge,
although small numbers of animals were used. In the experiment
with strain 9602, using larger number of animals, none of the
animals immunized with either PA or FIS alone survived the lethal
challenge, confirming the virulence of strain 9602 and the difficulty
of protecting mice. Nevertheless, all animals immunized with
the combination PA plus FIS were protected against 9602 (
P <
0.01).
Characterization of the humoral immune response.
In both animal models, the immunization procedure elicited significant
titers of antibody against PA (>5,000) and spore antigens
(>1,000) (Tables
1 and
2). Sera from immunized animals were
used to probe blots of spore surface antigen preparations. Few
protein bands were recognized (data not shown). The most strongly
labeled antigen was a polypeptide with a molecular size above
250 kDa.
To determine if the 100% protection observed with the combination PA plus FIS was the result of higher PA-neutralizing antibody titers, we determined the neutralizing activities of pools of sera from mice immunized with PA alone or with PA plus FIS (Table 2). The toxin-neutralizing activity of the PA-plus-FIS pool was no higher than that of the PA pool. Therefore, the differences in protection observed could not be due to differences in toxin inactivation.
Protective efficacy of FIS against a capsulated PA-deficient strain.
Infection involves both spore germination and subsequent vegetative-cell multiplication. The protection conferred by immunization with inactivated spores may act on the first of these processes. To test this, we constructed a challenge strain the virulence of which is entirely due to its multiplication properties. To avoid differences in the virulence background of the strain, we constructed an isogenic nontoxigenic derivative of 9602 (9602P). To make as small a change as possible, we introduced a nonpolar deletion into the pagA gene, which encodes PA.
Strain 9602P was highly attenuated for virulence in guinea pigs; 106 to 107 spores were required to kill half of the animals. As expected, immunization with PA was unable to protect against lethal challenge with 9602P, and no survival was observed (Table 3).
In contrast, immunization with FIS gave 100% protection. The difference in survival between the two groups was statistically significant (P < 0.01). These data strongly suggest that in guinea pigs, the immune response against FIS is sufficient to protect against infection with 9602P.
Unlike guinea pigs, mice were highly sensitive to 9602P, and
the LD
50 of this strain was similar to that of the wild-type
parental strain, 9602 (50 spores per mouse). Thus, although
9602P did not cause toxemia, its overall virulence in mice was
not substantially affected. Immunization with PA did not protect
mice against challenge with 9602P (Table
3), whereas immunization
with FIS protected 50% of the mice against such a challenge.
These data point to the higher sensitivity of mice to infection.

DISCUSSION
Anthrax involves both toxemia and septicemia leading to death
of the infected host. PA-based vaccines only target toxemia,
whereas live-spore vaccines may protect against both the effects.
Numerous studies evidence the substantial contribution of PA
as a vaccine component, but optimal protection is nevertheless
best achieved by live vaccines. Here, we report the successful
immunization of guinea pigs and mice with a combination of PA
and FIS. In both animal models, protection reached 100%. In
the sensitive mouse model, the PA-neutralizing antibody titers,
which have been considered a marker of protective immunity (
24),
were not affected upon addition of FIS. However, protection
was 0% after immunization with PA and 100% after immunization
with PA plus FIS in mice infected with strain 9602. The effect
of spores on protective immunity is therefore not a consequence
of greater neutralization of toxin activity. Animals also developed
an antibody response to spore antigens, as determined by ELISA.
The improved protection may be a consequence of the response
to these antigens, as has been proposed for live-spore vaccines
(
3). The contribution of FIS to protection against infection
was demonstrated by constructing a PA-deficient strain, 9602P,
and using it for challenge. Immunization with FIS was sufficient
to protect guinea pigs totally, and mice partially, against
infection with the capsulated 9602P strain. Interestingly, the
virulence of 9602P in mice and guinea pigs was very different:
guinea pigs were relatively resistant to 9602P, and thus the
toxin is likely to be the main virulence factor in anthrax-infected
guinea pigs. This probably also explains why guinea pigs are
easier to protect with PA-based vaccines than mice. Moreover,
successful passive protection with anti-PA sera has been reported
in guinea pigs (
15). In contrast, mice were as sensitive to
9602P as to the wild-type parental strain, 9602, which supports
observations made with pXO2
+ derivatives of virulent strains
(
32,
35). Therefore, control of septicemia might differ greatly
between host species. Protection of hosts highly susceptible
to infection probably requires more than PA-mediated toxin neutralization.
In summary, we present evidence that inclusion of killed spores greatly enhances the protective efficacy of a PA-based vaccine. Immunization with FIS plus PA provides a synergistic protective immunity acting on both toxemia and infection. The immune response induced by FIS may act early by blocking germination, a critical step at the onset of pathogen multiplication (6, 31). The molecular mechanisms of the protective immunity induced by FIS and the putative role of spore antigens need to be further investigated. It is clear that full protection against anthrax requires a multifactorial immune response. The results presented here may serve as the basis for the first design, for human use, of a subunit vaccine as protective as the current live veterinary vaccine.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank A. Fouet and P. Goossens for critical reading of the
manuscript, E. Duflot for technical assistance, and P. Sylvestre,
F. Ramisse, and A. Labarre at the Centre d'Étude du Bouchet
for assistance with animal experiments.
F. Brossier was supported by the Direction Générale des Armées (grant 9934030).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Unité des Toxines et Pathogénie Bactérienne (CNRS URA 2172), Institut Pasteur, 28 rue du Docteur Roux, 75725 Paris Cedex 15, France. Phone: (33) 145688312. Fax: (33) 145688954. E-mail:
mmock{at}pasteur.fr.

Editor:J. T. Barbieri

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Infection and Immunity, February 2002, p. 661-664, Vol. 70, No. 2
0019-9567/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 70.2.661-664.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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